The Future of Work
Labour Law and Labour Market Regulation in the Digital Era
Samenvatting
Studies in Employment and Social Policy Volume 56
About this book:
The Future of Work is the most expansive and comprehensive book of its kind. It is a collection of expert essays that furnishes an abundance of well-thought-out material for comprehending the consequences of digitalization for the labour market and industrial relations. Far from being solely a technological issue, digitalization has broad implications in the social, labour and economic spheres. It leads to perils and opportunities for the workforce, and thus labour law must establish effective ways to both protect workers and allow them to profit from new technological developments.
What’s in this book:
Being cognizant of the fact that only an international perspective can make it possible to face the challenges of the present (and the future), renowned authorities from the International Labour Organization and the International Society for Labour and Social Security Law, as well as outstanding labour law professors, examine in depth the following issues:
- transformation of production systems;
- the spread of artificial intelligence;
- precariousness and exploitation in the gig economy;
- lessons learned from COVID-19;
- employment status of platform workers;
- new cross-border issues;
- rights to trade union associations and collective bargaining;
- role of the State in the new digital labour market; and
- blurred lines between work and private life.
An international team of contributors deals with issues from various overlapping perspectives and points of view, combining aspects of labour law, commercial law, corporate governance, and international law.
How this will help you:
Accentuating the need to adapt, primarily through the right to training, work, and professionalism with respect to the new technological landscape, the book draws on legislative, judicial, and theoretical initiatives suggesting ways of responding positively to the requests for protection that arise in the new forms of production. A uniquely valuable tool for study and reflection for policymakers and academics, the book will be appreciated by entrepreneurs, managers, consultants, corporate lawyers, judges, human rights experts, and trade unionists who are interested in the issues of labour, industrial relations, and social rights in European and international contexts.
Specificaties
Inhoudsopgave
Contributors
Introduction
Adalberto Perulli
Part I
The Future of Work in the ILO Perspective
CHAPTER 1
The ILO and the Future of Work
Tiziano Treu
CHAPTER 2
Technology and Decent Work: Observations on the Report of the Global Commission on the Future of Work
Antoine Lyon-Caen
CHAPTER 3
Re-thinking Labour Law for the Twenty-First Century
Janice R. Bellace
CHAPTER 4
Labour Law and Digital Platforms
Giuseppe Casale & Mario Fasani
CHAPTER 5
The Division of Labor in the Digital Era
Vania Brino
CHAPTER 6
For a Human Centered Approach to the Future of Work
Philip Jennings
CHAPTER 7
Technological Change, Institutions, and the Labour Market
Luigi Salvati & Pasquale Tridico
Part II
The Challenges of Digitization to the Regulatory Categories of Labour Law
CHAPTER 8
Platform Capitalism and Labour Law
Adalberto Perulli
CHAPTER 9
Digitalization and Its Impacts of De-spatialization and De-temporalization of Work and De-territoralization of the Labour Market: Is It Time to Rethink a ‘Sustainable’ Labour Law?
Valentina Cagnin
CHAPTER 10
Platform Work: A Call for Working on a Rethink of the Institutions of Social Law
Céline Wattecamps
Part III
Digitalization, A.I. and Business 4.0. Changes in the Organization of Work and the Employment Relationship
CHAPTER 11
Challenges for Labour Law in the Era of Digitalization: With Special Reference to Germany
Manfred Weiss
CHAPTER 12
Artificial Intelligence: The Third Element of the Labour Relations
Michele Faioli
CHAPTER 13
Regulating the Employment Relationship in the Organization 4.0: Between Social Justice and Economic Efficiency
Iacopo Senatori
CHAPTER 14
The Impact of Digitalisation on Individual Labour Relations: Working Time as an Outdated Concept?
Iva Bjelinski Radic
Part IV
Institutional Aspects of Regulation: Between European Sources and Collective Bargaining
CHAPTER 15
Adapting Labor Law to “Digital” Work: Between Scholarly Interpretation, Case Law and Legislative Intervention
Edoardo Ales
CHAPTER 16
Platforms, Unions and Workers: Is It Possible a Collective Bargaining?
Alberto Pizzoferrato
CHAPTER 17
The Labour Market and the Digital Revolution: Focus on Some Effects, Legislative Implications and the Role of Collective Bargaining
Marcella Miracolini
Part V
Platform Work and Business 4.0: Analysis of Some National Cases
CHAPTER 18
Gig Work: Employees or Independent Contractors? Data and Regulatory Challenges in the Swedish Experience
Federico Fusco
CHAPTER 19
Protection from Discriminatory Dismissal According to ILO Norms in the Context of German and Turkish National Law
Ceren Kasim
CHAPTER 20
Digital Nomads on Polish Labour Market: Legal Situation, Risks and Expectations
Kamila Naumowicz
CHAPTER 21
Platform Work and ‘Double Alienness’
Simone D’Ascola
CHAPTER 22
Some Thoughts on Industry 4.0 and Trade Unions
Pasquale Monda
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Rubrieken
- aanbestedingsrecht
- aansprakelijkheids- en verzekeringsrecht
- accountancy
- algemeen juridisch
- arbeidsrecht
- bank- en effectenrecht
- bestuursrecht
- bouwrecht
- burgerlijk recht en procesrecht
- europees-internationaal recht
- fiscaal recht
- gezondheidsrecht
- insolventierecht
- intellectuele eigendom en ict-recht
- management
- mens en maatschappij
- milieu- en omgevingsrecht
- notarieel recht
- ondernemingsrecht
- pensioenrecht
- personen- en familierecht
- sociale zekerheidsrecht
- staatsrecht
- strafrecht en criminologie
- vastgoed- en huurrecht
- vreemdelingenrecht