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The COVID pandemic has demonstrated the weakness of neoliberalism by showing the importance of public services, workers’ need for security, and a heightened awareness of collective interdependence. Economic theory recognises the deficiencies of depending on market forces by accepting certain...
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Since the early 2000s, the ‘new social risks' approach has shifted the focus in welfare analysis from so-called old social risks to the so-called new social risks related to recent changes in the labour market and family structures. This approach captures a number of important changes in...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10013087732
The concept of path dependence is being used in highly deterministic ways in neo-institutionalist analysis, so that studies using this framework have dif.culty in accounting for, or predicting, change. However, the original Polya urn model from which pathdependence theory draws predicts that...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10009428400
No longer only the domain of corporate public relations, corporate social responsibility (CSR) has now become a serious concern for many firms and a major sphere of academic research. However, most strikingly, by encouraging corporations to play a role in economic governance, particularly at the...
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Against the background of the changing relationships between trade unions and political parties in Western Europe, this paper examines the nature and outcomes of unionparty alliances in East Central Europe. The paper advances two interrelated arguments. First, the nature of unionparty ties in...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10002533685
Are newly established institutions capable of shaping actors' strategies and coordinating behavior on a single path? Contrary to punctuated equilibrium analyses, this paper suggests that the constraining capacity of a range of newly established institutions in new European capitalisms is weak...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10003379508
This paper offers an explanation for variations in the effectiveness of trade unions to obtain legislative and policy concessions in peak-level tripartite negotiations in post-communist East Central Europe. I examine the usefulness of some standard interpretations for such variations, namely...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10009466396