Abstract: France and the UK are markedly different welfare states, both in terms of regime hype and in terms of the varying degree of state responsibility for reconciling work and family life. One recent theoretical strand suggests that welfare states will tend to grow more similar since they face broadly similar pressures. This paper discusses the policy responses in France and the UK to labour market Pressures resulting from enhanced international competition, technological development and family change during the past decade. These responses are set in the context of European debates about the desirability of greater flexibility, up-skilling and the activation of unemployed people, about the childcare needs of women workers and about the...
International audienceTo understand the relationships between changes to the family and changes to t...
The trade-off hypothesis suggests that high wage inequality in the US and the UK and high unemploym...
In this article, we reconstruct the institutional responses of different European welfare states and...
France and the UK are markedly different welfare states, both in terms of regime type and in terms o...
This dissertation explores the changing contours of the work-welfare nexus in Western Europe’s rich ...
This paper outlines the differences in the political economies of Britain and France in the years of...
Our paper charts the evolution of labour market and welfare policy in the UK since the mid-1990s, wi...
Standard accounts of unemployment protection and labour market policy reform tend to put France and ...
This article sheds light on the “Europeanisation” of French policy-making – defined as the national ...
European labour markets have undergone several important innovations over the last three decades. Mo...
Document de travail du CEET, n° 187This article analyses employment and wage adjustments within Fren...
Public debate about the welfare state in OECD countries has emphasized the need for reform to meet a...
In this article, we reconstruct the institutional responses of different European welfare states and...
During the past decade, prevailing scholarship has portrayed France and Germany as suffering from a ...
International audienceTo understand the relationships between changes to the family and changes to t...
The trade-off hypothesis suggests that high wage inequality in the US and the UK and high unemploym...
In this article, we reconstruct the institutional responses of different European welfare states and...
France and the UK are markedly different welfare states, both in terms of regime type and in terms o...
This dissertation explores the changing contours of the work-welfare nexus in Western Europe’s rich ...
This paper outlines the differences in the political economies of Britain and France in the years of...
Our paper charts the evolution of labour market and welfare policy in the UK since the mid-1990s, wi...
Standard accounts of unemployment protection and labour market policy reform tend to put France and ...
This article sheds light on the “Europeanisation” of French policy-making – defined as the national ...
European labour markets have undergone several important innovations over the last three decades. Mo...
Document de travail du CEET, n° 187This article analyses employment and wage adjustments within Fren...
Public debate about the welfare state in OECD countries has emphasized the need for reform to meet a...
In this article, we reconstruct the institutional responses of different European welfare states and...
During the past decade, prevailing scholarship has portrayed France and Germany as suffering from a ...
International audienceTo understand the relationships between changes to the family and changes to t...
The trade-off hypothesis suggests that high wage inequality in the US and the UK and high unemploym...
In this article, we reconstruct the institutional responses of different European welfare states and...