OPEN ACCESS ISSN 2280-4056 E-Journal of International and Comparative LABOUR STUDIES Volume 1, No. 1-2 March-June 2012 UNIVERSITY PRESS E-Journal of International and Comparative LABOUR STUDIES ADAPT International School of Higher Education in Labour and Industrial Relations Scientific Directors Lauren Appelbaum (USA), Greg Bamber (Australia), Daria V. Chernyaeva (Russia), Richard Croucher (United Kingdom), Maurizio del Conte (Italy), Tomas Davilus (Lithuania), Tayo Fashoyin (Nigeria), József Hajdu (Hungary), Ann Hodges (USA), Richard Hyman (United Kingdom), Maarten Keune (The Netherlands), Chris Leggett (Australia), Shinya Ouchi (Japan), Massimo Pilati (Italy), Michael Quinlan (Australia), Juan Raso Delgue (Uruguay), Raúl G. Saco Barrios (Peru), Alfredo Sánchez Castaneda (Mexico), Malcolm Sargeant (United Kingdom), Jean-Michel Servais (Belgium), Silvia Spattini (Italy), Michele Tiraboschi (Italy), Anil Verma (Canada), Stephen A. Woodbury (USA) Joint Managing Editors Malcolm Sargeant (Middlesex University, United Kingdom) Michele Tiraboschi (University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Italy) Editorial Board Lilli Casano (Italy), Francesca Fazio (Italy), Emanuele Ferragina (United Kingdom), Antonio Firinu (Italy), Valentina Franca (Slovenia), Maria Giovannone (Italy), Erica Howard (United Kingdom), Karl Koch (United Kingdom), Lefteris Kretsos (United Kingdom), Attila Kun (Hungary), Felicity Lamm (New Zealand), Cristina Lincaru (Romania), Nikita Lyutov (Russia), Merle Muda (Estonia), Boaz Munga (Kenya), Eleonora Peliza (Argentina), Daiva Petrylaite (Lithuania), Valeria Pulignano (Belgium), Ceciel Rayer (The Netherlands), Aidan Regan (Ireland), Marian Rizov (United Kingdom), Salma Slama (Tunisia), Francesca Sperotti (Italy), Araya Mesele Welemariam (Ethiopia), Barbara Winkler (Austria), Machilu Zimba (South Africa) Language Editor Pietro Manzella (ADAPT Senior Research Fellow) Book Review Editor Chris Leggett (James Cook University, Australia) Digital Editor Avinash Raut (ADAPT Technologies) E-Journal of International and Comparative LABOUR STUDIES Volume 1, No. 1-2 March-June 2012 UNIVERSITY PRESS @ 2012 ADAPT University Press Online Publication of the ADAPT Series Registration No. 1609, 11 November 2001, Court of Modena www.adaptbulletin.eu The articles and the documents published in the E-journal of International and Comparative Labour Studies are not copyrighted. The only requirement to make use of them is to cite their source, which should contain the following wording: @ 2012 ADAPT University Press. INDEX Editorial Malcolm Sargeant and Michele Tiraboschi, Building the Future of Work Together ............................................................................................................................................. 1 Contributions Michele Tiraboschi, Young Workers in Recessionary Times: A Caveat (to Continental Europe) to Reconstruct its Labour Law? ............................................................................... 3 Theodore Koutroukis, Factors Contributing to the Effectiveness of the European Works Council: An Explorative Study ........................................................................................... 25 Erica Howard, Equality Bodies and Individual Victims: an Example of Good Practice from the Netherlands ........................................................................................................... 43 Lourdes Mella Méndez, The Transposition of Council Directive 99/70/EC of 28 June 1999 on Fixed-term Work into Spanish Labour Law: Some Critical Aspects following the 2011and 2012 Reforms ...................................................................................................... 69 Ben Olabimitan, Family-supportive Organisational Perception: A Predictor of Life Satisfaction among Lagos State Employees .......................................................................... 85 Zakaria Shvelidze, Working Time Regulation in Georgia ............................................. 99 Carmen Agut García and Cayetano Núñez González, The Regulation of Economically Dependent Self-Employed Work in Spain: A Critical Analysis and a Comparison with Italy ....................................................................................................... 117 E-Journa l of International and Comparative LABOUR STUDIES Volume 1, No. 1-2 March-June 2012 @ 2012 ADAPT University Press - ISSN 2280-4056 INDEX VI Commentary Roy Adams, The Right to Strike in Canada: Comment on a Recent Saskatchewan Court Decision ............................................................................................................................ 135 Malcolm Sargeant, Shades of Grey ............................................................................ 139 Lisa Rodgers, The UK Employment Law Review and Changes to Unfair Dismissal ... 145 Book Reviews Christopher Leggett, International Employment and Labour Law by Jean Michel Servais. A Review. .......................................................................................................... 153 Online Resources ................................................................................................... 157 http://adapt.it/EJCLS/ Building the Future of Work Together Malcolm Sargeant and Michele Tiraboschi There is common consensus that innovation in technology, large cuts in public expenditure for higher education, as well as major demographic and geopolitical changes that occurred over the last decades deeply affected the way we carry out research today. This is particularly true in the field of labour relations, due to ongoing innovation in production and work processes. However, although resulting in many limitations and constraints, this state of affairs laid the foundations for new opportunities, as entailing the establishment of renewed relations either between the members of the international academic community, and among various actors from universities, businesses, trade unions and public institutions. We firmly believe that there is a continuing need for ways of disseminating information and ideas and we think that a journal easily accessible on line will provide a much wider distribution network for researchers to publicise and share their work. This is the reason for the establishment of an innovative journal that will be free to all those with on line access and who have registered their interest. As recently pointed out by the Association of American University Presses (Sustaining Scholarly Publishing: New Business Models for University Presses, March 2011) “monographs remain largely static objects, isolated from the interconnections of social computing, instead of being vibrant hubs for discussion and engagement”. The same can be said for the majority of academic journals as, notwithstanding their high level of excellence, are at risk of being self-referential, seemingly ignoring the dynamic nature of the world of work. Further, contributions in this field are often published long after changes occurred, without being able to keep up with the evolution of relevant regulatory and institutional framework, and therefore providing for outdated analyses. In this connection, the digital format of the E-Journal of International and Comparative Labour Studies and the internet platform serving as a hub for a well established international network are intended to provide an open area where it will be possible to promote the exchange of new ideas, E-Journa l of International and Comparative LABOUR STUDIES Volume 1, No. 1-2 March-June 2012 @ 2012 ADAPT University Press - ISSN 2280-4056 MALCOLM SARGEANT AND MICHELE TIRABOSCHI 2 back to index information and relevant documentation as a starting point for further cooperation between institutions of higher education, social partners, practitioners and companies. One of the aims of this new Journal is to accelerate the progress towards a fully open access environment all over the world. As pointed out in the Report of the Working Group Expanding Access to Publish Research Findings (Finch Group in June 2012), this “will bring substantial benefits both for researchers and everyone who has an interest in the result of their work”. Our international network of correspondents will be supported by a scientific committee and by more than 200 researchers and doctoral students of ADAPT, the non-profit organization founded in 2000 by Prof. Marco Biagi with the aim of promoting studies and research in the field of labour law and industrial relations from an international and comparative perspective. Our purpose is to encourage and implement a new approach to academic research, by establishing ongoing relationships with other universities and advanced research institutes, and by promoting academic and scientific exchange programmes with enterprises, trade unions, institutions, foundations and associations. Generally, we are concerned with issues in employment relations, human resource management, health and safety, psychology, sociology, labour economics, politics, labour law and history. More specifically, this might include research and new developments with regard to comparative collective and individual labour issues, equality and discrimination, transitions to work, public policy and labour regulation, vulnerable workers and precarious working, employment productivity and international labour institutions; and any other material concerned with any aspect of labour studies. Such an investigation is intended to cast light on main issues flowing from the debate in these research fields, sharing a platform for interdisciplinary discussion and creative hints for research, with a view to building the future of work together. The EJICLS is committed to rigorous scholarship and quality. All articles will be subject to independent refereeing before being accepted for publication. http://adapt.it/EJCLS/ Young Workers in Recessionary Times: A Caveat (to Continental Europe) to Reconstruct its Labour Law? Michele Tiraboschi * Introductory Remarks Policy makers, social partners, and the public opinion monitor with interest and increasing concern the steep increase in youth unemployment, in Europe more than elsewhere.1 Indeed, all the main international institutions2—supported by the analysis of labour market experts3—seem to uphold that young people have been hit the hardest by the “great crisis” that began in 2007 with the collapse of financial markets. It is only natural then that in a time of ongoing recession and many sacrifices demanded of workers,4 feelings of apprehension and hope arise * Michele Tiraboschi is Full Professor of Labour Law, University of Modena and Reggio Emilia. 1 In other areas of the world, especially in developing countries, the cultural lens through which the problem of youth unemployment is explored might be different. See on the issue I. Senatori, M. Tiraboschi, Productivity, Investment in Human Capital and the Challenge of Youth Employment in the Global Market. Comparative Developments and Global Responses in the Perspective of School-to-Work Transition, 5th IIRA African Regional Congress, South Africa - IIRA Cape Town. 2 See, by way of an example, ILO, World of Work Report 2012. Better Jobs for a Better Economy, International Labour Office, Geneva, 2012; ILO, Global Employment Trends for Youth. August 2010, International Labour Office, Geneva, 2010; J. Martin, Unfinished Business: Investing in Youth, in OECD Employment Outlook 2011; OECD, Off to a Good Start? Jobs for Youth, 2010. 3 See S. Verick, Who Is Hit Hardest during a Financial Crisis? The Vulnerability of Young Men and Women to Unemployment in an Economic Downturn, IZA Discussion Paper, 2009, n. 4359. For a different perspective and some valid criticisms on this shared opinion by N. O’Higgins, see This Time It’s Different? Youth Labour Market During the Great Recession, IZA Discussion Paper, 2012, n. 6434, in particular, par. 2. Both papers are available at www.bollettinoadapt.it, A-Z index, Lavoratori giovani. 4 Particularly relevant in this respect is the study presented in the World of Work Report 2012 of the ILO (op. cit., note 2) on the measures that affected workers in terms of protection reduction. E-Journa l of International and Comparative LABOUR STUDIES Volume 1, No. 1-2 March-June 2012 @ 2012 ADAPT University Press - ISSN 2280-4056 MICHELE TIRABOSCHI 4 with regard to the future, therefore involving younger generations and their employment prospects in the years ahead. The notion of unemployment has long become less and less appropriate to frame the critical aspects of the interplay between young people and employment.5 Of equal importance, as well as extensively discussed and highly controversial, are those phenomenon accompanying young people in their school-to-work transitions, particularly inactivity, precarious employment and low wages.6 Nevertheless, unemployment still remains a main indicator, as it supplies clear and immediate evidence of the vulnerability of young people in the labour market, also for those who are not experts in the field. According to relevant data,7 in most countries—whether industrialised or non- industrialised ones—high levels of youth unemployment have been reported long before the onset of the recent economic and financial crisis, to the extent that many specialists made use of the term déjà vu to refer to the phenomenon.8 Accordingly, the concern resulting from high youth unemployment rates is not a novelty. What appears to be quite new here, at least within the political and institutional public debate taking place in recent years, is the emphasis placed by Europe on the future of younger generations and how this issue is “exploited” to justify—or perhaps to impose—major labour market reforms and deregulation on nation States overseen by central institutions, which will also limit their sovereignty.9 Put it differently, labour law rules—chiefly concerning high levels of protection against termination of employment—would explain high youth unemployment rates as well as the increasing recourse to atypical, non- standard or temporary employment arrangements. Indeed, there is little wonder about this issue, save for the fact that—in a time of severe crisis and ongoing recession—fathers are now called to make a lot of sacrifices that are deemed to be “acceptable”, for they 5 On this topic, see O. Marchand, Youth Unemployment in OECD Countries: How Can the Disparities Be Explained? in OECD, Preparing Youth for the 21st Century—The Transition from Education to the labour Market, 1999, 89. 6 This issue has been extensively discussed in M. Tiraboschi, Young People and Employment in Italy: The (Difficult) Transition from Education and Training to the Labour Market, in IJCLLIR, 2006, 81 ff. 7 See, among others, N. O’Higgins, op. cit. 8 D.N.F. Bell, D.G. Blanchflower, Youth Unemployment: Déjà Vu, IZA Discussion Paper, 2010, n. 4705, at www.bollettinoadapt.it, A-Z index, Lavoratori giovani. 9 In this respect, see A. Baylos, Crisi del diritto del lavoro o diritto del lavoro in crisi? La riforma del lavoro spagnola del 2012, in Diritto delle Relazioni Industriali, 2012, n. 2. http://adapt.it/EJCLS/
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