etui.podcast
Government
The European Trade Union Institute (ETUI) podcast offers new perspectives on ongoing research and education on social Europe, worker participation, health and safety, the wider labour movement and the world of work.
Location:
United States
Description:
The European Trade Union Institute (ETUI) podcast offers new perspectives on ongoing research and education on social Europe, worker participation, health and safety, the wider labour movement and the world of work.
Language:
English
Website:
https://anchor.fm/etui
Episodes
The future of Social Europe with Maarten Keune
9/7/2023
The resurgence of the social dimension of the EU raises a number of questions: in what way and to what extent has the EU social dimension indeed been strengthened since the adoption of the EPSR? To what extent are newly adopted social policies actually likely to contribute to improving people’s lives, and in particular the lives of those who face precarious working or living conditions? What explains the broad political support of the centre-left and centre-right for this social turn?
Find out more in Transfer's latest issue on Social Europe
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Duration:00:17:22
Regulating AI at work with Valerio De Stefano and Virginia Doellgast
6/30/2023
AI is now widely used to automate business processes and replace labour-intensive tasks while changing the skill demands for those that remain. How are AI-based tools deployed to monitor worker conduct and to automate HR management processes? Through the dual lens of comparative labour law and employment relations research, our guest investigate the role of collective bargaining and government policy in shaping strategies to deploy new digital and AI-based technologies at work.
More about the special issue: https://journals.sagepub.com/toc/trsa/29/1
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Duration:00:34:42
A house of dignity for domestic workers in Europe with Maddalena Colombi, Aude Cefaliello and Grace Papa
6/11/2023
There are almost 2.6 million domestic workers in Europe working in private homes or others. Though representing a huge and vital workforce, their economic and social contribution has often been denied and they are longing for recognition. Although domestic workers are finally enjoying more social rights, trade unions have a key role to play to achieve improved working conditions for domestic workers within and across borders.
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Duration:00:16:05
What is happening in the world of work? with Nicola Countouris and Sotiria Theodoropoulou
4/7/2023
How can the European Union steer a course towards long-term social and ecological well-being in the context of incessant emergencies? Two decades of perpetual crisis management have greatly eroded Europe’s capacity to pursue a sustainable future, as considerations of short-term expediency continue to hamper the four necessary transitions – green, digital, geopolitical and socio-economic.
Find out more in Benchmarking Working Europe 2023
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Duration:00:12:17
What are eco-social policies? with Philippe Pochet & Béla Galgóczi
3/15/2023
Until recently, the discussion of social welfare systems in Europe was disconnected from ecological concerns and policies. The relevant objectives, instruments and actors were largely different. Environmental and climate science, on the one hand, and the analysis and theoretical foundations of welfare systems, on the other, emerged and developed in disparate silos. While the welfare state was designed to reduce social risks and ensure (relative) stability of income and societies, it was also created as an institution that favours economic growth and the maintenance of income and consumption. Its aim was not to change behaviour but to maintain it, with a focus on redistribution. With environmental inequalities increasingly embedded in social ones, environmental policies are becoming social policies, and vice-versa.
Find out more in the recent Transfer Issue
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Duration:00:08:37
How should we think about modern capitalism? with Lucio Baccaro, Mark Blyth, and Jonas Pontusson
2/20/2023
Advanced capitalist societies seem to limp from one existential crisis to the next, becoming ever more fragile and unstable. Yet the dominant theoretical frameworks in political economy view capitalism as fundamentally stable or, at most, subject to incremental change. Baccaro, Blyth and Pontusson emphasise the diversity of capitalist trajectories or, rather, growth models.
How should we think about modern capitalism? A growth models approach - Transfer article - Lucio Baccaro, Mark Blyth, and Jonas Pontusson
The book: Diminishing Returns, The New Politics of Growth and Stagnation - Mark Blyth, Jonas Pontusson, and Lucio Baccaro
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Duration:00:28:02
The EU adequate minimum wages directive with Esther Lynch and Torsten Müller
9/21/2022
One should be careful using the word ‘historic’. But in the case of the directive on adequate minimum wages in the European Union it might actually be appropriate.
Minimum wage directive boost to struggling workers
Energy now costs month’s wages for low paid
EU confirms prices not wages driving inflation
The European minimum wage on the doorstep - Torsten Müller & Thorsten Schulten
Minimum-wages directive—history in the making - Torsten Müller & Thorsten Schulten
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Duration:00:19:01
Trade unions, unemployment benefits and labour market outsiders with Daniel Clegg and Elke Heins
9/12/2022
Even in Continental Europe, trade unions are the most powerful voice defending outsiders in welfare state politics, and reducing their institutional power in unemployment insurance and elsewhere will likely make things worse for outsiders and not – as certain political leaders in these countries often imply – make things better.
Unemployment benefit governance, trade unions and outsider protection in conservative welfare states - Daniel Clegg, Elke Heins, Philip Rathgeb
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Duration:00:24:06
How is AI impacting our lives? with Hamid Ekbia and Nicola Countouris
8/4/2022
In this episode, you will be hearing a conversation between Hamid Ekbia and Nicola Countouris on AI, the concept of Heteromation and how artificial intelligence is impacting and will impact our (working) lives.
This episode is part of the Reconstruction Beyond the Pandemic Project.
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Duration:00:10:58
Psychosocial risks in Europe with Aude Cefaliello
7/11/2022
What are psychosocial risks? PSRs are increasingly impacting all industries in every Member State. The effects of psychosocial risks can be long-lasting and have both physical and psychological impacts on workers’ lives (such as depression, musculoskeletal disorders or burnout).
Find out more: https://www.etui.org/publications/psychosocial-risks-europe
https://www.etui.org/sites/default/files/2021-12/01-ETU%20BM2021-Chap5-Occupational%20health%20and%20safety%20inequalities%20in%20the%20EU_1.pdf
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Duration:00:15:18
Covid-19 and the world of work with David Natali
7/4/2022
This episode with David Natali (Professor of Comparative and EU politics at the Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies) addresses some of the key questions stemming from the pandemic. The magnitude of the crisis, in terms of both its impact on health and well-being, and its consequences on economic prospects, is enormous. The massive spread of the virus, higher mortality rates, lockdowns and the huge decline in economic activity in 2020 all seemed to bode ill for our future.
Find out more in Transfer's latest issue on Covid-19.
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Duration:00:17:43
European social citizenship: what does the public think? with Marius Busemeyer and Gianna Eick
4/25/2022
What type of European social citizenship does the public across the European Union (EU) prefer on the national- and EU-levels? This episode looks into the development of public opinion towards European social citizenship from 1985 to the present from a birds-eye perspective.
Further readings:
35 years of public opinion surveys and European social citizenship: What can we conclude?
Measuring social citizenship in social policy outputs, resources and outcomes across EU member states from 1985 to the present
Welfare chauvinism across benefits and services
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Duration:00:18:29
The platform economy in Europe with Wouter Zwysen and Jan Drahokoupil
4/11/2022
The pandemic seems to have accelerated the expansion of all kinds of platform work and at the same time, platform work is being increasingly associated with difficult working conditions, health and safety risks, and inadequate levels of income for those that rely on it as a source of living. This podcast episode will shed light on some of the key insights from the second wave of the Internet and Platform work survey conducted in fourteen EU countries in Spring 2021.
The platform economy in Europe, Results from the second ETUI Internet and Platform Work Survey (IPWS) - Agnieszka Piasna, Wouter Zwysen and Jan Drahokoupil
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Duration:00:29:01
Re-emerging social ambitions in EU policy making? with Bart Vanhercke and Slavina Spasova
3/22/2022
The European Union is currently fighting on two main fronts, Covid-19 and climate change, though with skirmishes elsewhere – including migration and the rule of law. While science seems to be slowly gaining the upper hand in the fight against the pandemic, despite setbacks like the latest Omicron attack, Covid-19 continues to hold global society in its grip. But the second nut is even harder to crack. Climate change is rolling out its forces, in the form of floods, droughts, tornados and hurricanes, and striking indiscriminately.
Vanhercke, Spasova et al. (2022) Social policy in the European Union: state of play 2021
Sabato et al. (2022) A ‘Social Imbalances Procedure’ for the EU
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Quo vadis, Social Europe? with Caroline de la Porte, Maurizio Ferrera and Philippe Pochet
2/15/2022
In this episode, we had the pleasure of interviewing Caroline de la Porte (Copenhagen Business School), Maurizio Ferrera (Università degli Studi di Milano) and Philippe Pochet (ETUI) on the recent developments in EU Social Policy. The discussion stems from their recent contribution to Transfer. In the second half of the episode, we had the pleasure to talk to Hyojin Seo, the winner of Transfer's young scholar award and her article on labour market segmentation.
Social Europe 2.0? New prospects after the Porto Social Summit - Maurizio Ferrera
Opening up the Pandora’s Box of EU Social Rights - Caroline de la Porte
Why politics matter - Philippe Pochet
‘Dual’ labour market? Patterns of segmentation in European labour markets and the varieties of precariousness - Hyojin Seo
EUSocialCit project
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Duration:00:25:36
A conversation with Nobel Prize winner, Klaus Hasselmann and Susanne Hasselmann-Barthe on climate change and climatology
11/18/2021
In this episode, we had the honour of discussing with pioneer climate activist in science: Klaus Hasselmann, who laid the foundations for linking climate change to human-made CO2 emissions and has been very recently awarded a Nobel Prize in Physics.
Show notes:
Klaus Hasselmann und Luisa Neubauer, Kriegen wir das hin? (Zeit online)
Hasselmann et al. Reframing the Problem of Climate Change - From Zero Sum Game to Win-Win Solutions
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Duration:00:12:46
Why is the ETUI’s Education department learning approach unique? with Gabriela Portela
10/25/2021
The ETUI Education department offers a wide range of high-quality training on key competencies and skills to European Trade Union members. The end goal? Strengthening and expanding the labour movement.
More info: www.etui.org/education
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Duration:00:16:58
Do trade unions and industrial relations effectively reduce inequality? with Lisa Dorigatti and Roberto Pedersini
10/13/2021
Inequality has been a growing concern in recent years. The internationalisation of production and markets, the rampant financialisation of the economy, the deregulation of labour markets, and the retrenchment of welfare systems are only some of the factors that have been feeding into increased inequality in terms of income, property, job security, and working and living conditions. The weakening of industrial relations institutions has also been regarded as part of this broad picture since trade unions and collective bargaining have usually been considered as vehicles of fairness and capable of reducing or at least containing inequality. This podcast episode revolves around Transfer's issue on Industrial relations and inequality and intends to contribute to this strand of research by investigating the analytical premises and the empirical evidence of such claims.
The issue can be viewed here: https://journals.sagepub.com/toc/trsa/27/1
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Duration:00:24:05
The creative industry & Covid-19 with Valeria Pulignano
7/8/2021
The Covid‑19 pandemic is still causing tremendous human suffering, with serious and long-term implications for people’s health, wellbeing and quality of life as well as for the economy, work and employment overall. In this episode, we will be exploring together with Valeria Pulignano how millions of workers especially in the creative industries have been vulnerable to layoffs and income loss.
Valeria Pulignano et al.'s publication can be downloaded here: https://www.etui.org/publications/creative-labour-era-covid-19
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Duration:00:20:25
(How) can international trade union organisations be democratic? with Richard Hyman and Rebecca Gumbrell-McCormick
5/31/2021
International trade union organisations, like unions at national level, commonly affirm their commitment to internal democracy. But what does this mean? We will be discussing this with two academic giants, Richard Hyman and Rebecca Gumbrell-McCormick.
Find out more in Rebecca's and Richard's latest article in Transfer: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/1024258920938499
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Duration:00:40:16