Full employment is a tenet of classic social democracy – but what if that just isn't applicable anymore? Nick Srnicek and Alex Williams survey the state of the British labour market and ask how a modern Labour party might reframe the issue of work so that it is sustainable and sustaining in the face of technological change
Post-work politics, with a focus on universal basic income, rather than an agenda of saving jo...
The fourth industrial revolution has become a prominent concept and imminent technological change a ...
Almost in a blink of the eye the policy focus on the ‘knowledge’ economy, with mass ranks of high sk...
Full employment is a tenet of classic social democracy – but what if that just isn't applicable anym...
New winners, models and industries will emerge; the universe is full of new opportunities for commod...
What Do We Know and What Should We Do About The Future of Work? is part of a new book series offerin...
This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by Taylor and Francis in Journal of Economic ...
Will technological progress lead to a world without work? The debate on the ‘end of work’ is current...
Welfare to Work was one of the Labour Party's flagship policies during the run-up to the 1997 electi...
The future of work is one of increasing precarity and uncertainty. The continued implementation of a...
It's beyond zero-hour contracts; the contract is nonexistent, argues Elizabeth Cotto
Looking at current labour market trends and assessing the credibility of the parties’ manifestos - b...
It is 80 years since Beveridge took on what he called the ‘five giants’ of want, disease, ignorance,...
The changing nature of work in the 21st century and the widening gap in income has led to a vibrant ...
Alternative perspectives from economics and political economy now agree that work is set to disappea...
Post-work politics, with a focus on universal basic income, rather than an agenda of saving jo...
The fourth industrial revolution has become a prominent concept and imminent technological change a ...
Almost in a blink of the eye the policy focus on the ‘knowledge’ economy, with mass ranks of high sk...
Full employment is a tenet of classic social democracy – but what if that just isn't applicable anym...
New winners, models and industries will emerge; the universe is full of new opportunities for commod...
What Do We Know and What Should We Do About The Future of Work? is part of a new book series offerin...
This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by Taylor and Francis in Journal of Economic ...
Will technological progress lead to a world without work? The debate on the ‘end of work’ is current...
Welfare to Work was one of the Labour Party's flagship policies during the run-up to the 1997 electi...
The future of work is one of increasing precarity and uncertainty. The continued implementation of a...
It's beyond zero-hour contracts; the contract is nonexistent, argues Elizabeth Cotto
Looking at current labour market trends and assessing the credibility of the parties’ manifestos - b...
It is 80 years since Beveridge took on what he called the ‘five giants’ of want, disease, ignorance,...
The changing nature of work in the 21st century and the widening gap in income has led to a vibrant ...
Alternative perspectives from economics and political economy now agree that work is set to disappea...
Post-work politics, with a focus on universal basic income, rather than an agenda of saving jo...
The fourth industrial revolution has become a prominent concept and imminent technological change a ...
Almost in a blink of the eye the policy focus on the ‘knowledge’ economy, with mass ranks of high sk...