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  Work & Welfare

This policy theme includes our work on employment, welfare, worklessness, pay, and skills. In 2010 our work in this area will be looking at high pay and a 'living wage', policies for full employment, and employment protection.

Project partners include:
David Coats, Professor Duncan Gallie CBE FBA, John Philpott, Derek Simpson, Brendan Barber, Work Foundation, Reed, Prudential, and Thompsons Solicitors.

Advancing Opportunity: The future of good work
This monograph, the last in a series under the theme of “Advancing Opportunity”, explores the future of “good work”. There has been a lack of attention given to the quality of work, despite the fact that for most people work is where they spend most of their time, and for many others it is where they derive a fair proportion of their status, their dignity, their self-esteem, their identity and their sense of personal progress. The phrase “good work” is intended to offer a broad rubric to consider how the quality of working life can be improved and performance and productivity enhanced. This collection of essays sets out how good work chimes with the most pressing issues affecting our economy and our society – including the rise of the knowledge economy, globalisation and outsourcing, the difficulties of getting people off welfare and into work, and skills – and outlines how a new politics of “good work” can be constructed. Includes chapters from Rt Hon James Purnell MP, David Coats, Professor Duncan Gallie CBE FBA, John Philpott, James Reed, Brendan Barber, and Professor JR Shackleton. 2009

Trades Unions and Globalisation
A collection of essays considering the role of Trades Unions in the global economy, looking at the role that unions can play in preparing Britain’s workers for the effects of globalisation, and how international links between unions can offer an important force for progressive change across the world. Increased competition from abroad has heralded changing industrial patterns in Britain, with consequences for workers in each sector of the UK economy. The rise of off-shoring is just one example. In a global economy, the uncertainties that accompany the free movement of labour, and the fast pace at which a competitive advantage can be created and lost, have led many countries to move in the direction of increased protectionism. However, as the Chancellor has suggested, measures that seek to reverse or halt the free movement of goods and services, capital and labour are likely to impact disproportionately on our prosperity and growth. As this collection shows, a better approach may be to seek to involve workers and employers in meeting the challenges of a rapidly changing and changeable labour market, preparing workers for the jobs of the future and seeking to develop mechanisms for people to learn new skills at every stage of their lives. Includes chapters by Ian McCartney MP, Brendan Barber, Dave Prentis, Derek Simpson, John Monks, and Ed Balls MP. 2007

Click here for all our publications on work and welfare

 

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