The European Union establishes minimum requirements in the field of labour rights and work organisation (EC Treaty, articles 136-139). These requirements regard the consultation and information of workers, working hours, equal treatment and pay, insolvency and the transfer of undertakings. Since the 1990s the discourse on the relationship between the EU and member states in the field of labour law has changed significantly and it has been increasingly supplemented by framework agreements between the EU and the actors involved in the labour law dialogue. From this point of view, the Green Paper on Modernising labour law (Green Paper – Modernising labour law to meet the challenges of the 21st century – COM/2006/0708 final) invites member st...
The subject matter of this research is the influence of the current globalization and harmonization ...
Is the intervention of the state in regulating collective labour relations a useful and beneficial t...
In the prologue to From Labour Law to Social Competition Law?,1 Marc Rigaux prudently begins by poi...
The European Union establishes minimum requirements in the field of labour rights and work organisat...
Since the 1990s the discourse on the relationship between the EU and member states in the field of l...
Looking at the instruments of the EU economic governance (Memoranda of Understanding; Country Specif...
The aim of this paper is to explore the European Social Dialogue as a regulatory institution and its...
The Central and Eastern European countries undergo political and economie changes since 1989-1990. T...
Labour law – comprising individual employment laws and the collective regulation of work by trade un...
Labour law and social policy have long provided an arena within which key debates over the depth and...
AbstractOn November 22, 2006, the European Commission presented its Green Paper: Modernising labour ...
In the regulation of employment, public authorities currently face three problems: non-standard empl...
The debate surrounding the nature of “Europeanisation” has been raging in the EU for a number of yea...
[From the Introduction]. This chapter is focused principally on current developments in European soc...
This article offers a critical analysis of the concept of ‘worker’ in European Labour Law as predomi...
The subject matter of this research is the influence of the current globalization and harmonization ...
Is the intervention of the state in regulating collective labour relations a useful and beneficial t...
In the prologue to From Labour Law to Social Competition Law?,1 Marc Rigaux prudently begins by poi...
The European Union establishes minimum requirements in the field of labour rights and work organisat...
Since the 1990s the discourse on the relationship between the EU and member states in the field of l...
Looking at the instruments of the EU economic governance (Memoranda of Understanding; Country Specif...
The aim of this paper is to explore the European Social Dialogue as a regulatory institution and its...
The Central and Eastern European countries undergo political and economie changes since 1989-1990. T...
Labour law – comprising individual employment laws and the collective regulation of work by trade un...
Labour law and social policy have long provided an arena within which key debates over the depth and...
AbstractOn November 22, 2006, the European Commission presented its Green Paper: Modernising labour ...
In the regulation of employment, public authorities currently face three problems: non-standard empl...
The debate surrounding the nature of “Europeanisation” has been raging in the EU for a number of yea...
[From the Introduction]. This chapter is focused principally on current developments in European soc...
This article offers a critical analysis of the concept of ‘worker’ in European Labour Law as predomi...
The subject matter of this research is the influence of the current globalization and harmonization ...
Is the intervention of the state in regulating collective labour relations a useful and beneficial t...
In the prologue to From Labour Law to Social Competition Law?,1 Marc Rigaux prudently begins by poi...