While there are few signs that workplace digitalisation leads to mass unemployment, Nikolas Schöll finds that it contributes to growing income inequalities between low and highly educated workers. These diverging economic trajectories are also mirrored in party support: winners of digitalization become more supportive of the incumbent government and the Conservative Party, whereas losers of digitalization become tentatively more supportive of UKIP
Are state unemployment benefits a safety net or a hammock for the lazy? In new research, Thomas Bieg...
This paper analyzes policy shifts in two core welfare state programs in Germany: old-age pensions an...
Recent research by the RSA explores what 'good work' means in practice. The findings reveal how econ...
The narrative that automation will lead to mass unemployment and thus people should settle for a bas...
The adoption of information and communications technology has given rise to a skill bias: those with...
To make employment inclusive for people living with disability or health conditions, there is an urg...
Felix FitzRoy and David Spencer highlight some fundamental problems of UK economic policy, as expose...
Although we are not yet on the cusp of a 'post-human' society, the prospect of automation still pose...
Jean-Philippe Robé discusses how multinational enterprises morphed into political organisations with...
With the unprecedented workplace disruption brought on by the pandemic, many companies introduced po...
Given the increasing trend towards knowledge-based economies, it is important for policymakers to un...
Job stability varies drastically between individuals, with some people staying in jobs for an extend...
Avoiding potentially divisive language and encouraging tolerance are critical steps to creating an i...
A YouGov survey in June 2021 showed that 30% of disabled employees in the UK feel they have been tre...
The latest UK unemployment figures showed unemployment at its lowest level since the 1970s, but ther...
Are state unemployment benefits a safety net or a hammock for the lazy? In new research, Thomas Bieg...
This paper analyzes policy shifts in two core welfare state programs in Germany: old-age pensions an...
Recent research by the RSA explores what 'good work' means in practice. The findings reveal how econ...
The narrative that automation will lead to mass unemployment and thus people should settle for a bas...
The adoption of information and communications technology has given rise to a skill bias: those with...
To make employment inclusive for people living with disability or health conditions, there is an urg...
Felix FitzRoy and David Spencer highlight some fundamental problems of UK economic policy, as expose...
Although we are not yet on the cusp of a 'post-human' society, the prospect of automation still pose...
Jean-Philippe Robé discusses how multinational enterprises morphed into political organisations with...
With the unprecedented workplace disruption brought on by the pandemic, many companies introduced po...
Given the increasing trend towards knowledge-based economies, it is important for policymakers to un...
Job stability varies drastically between individuals, with some people staying in jobs for an extend...
Avoiding potentially divisive language and encouraging tolerance are critical steps to creating an i...
A YouGov survey in June 2021 showed that 30% of disabled employees in the UK feel they have been tre...
The latest UK unemployment figures showed unemployment at its lowest level since the 1970s, but ther...
Are state unemployment benefits a safety net or a hammock for the lazy? In new research, Thomas Bieg...
This paper analyzes policy shifts in two core welfare state programs in Germany: old-age pensions an...
Recent research by the RSA explores what 'good work' means in practice. The findings reveal how econ...