ABSTRACT

Using a comparative framework, this new volume focuses on how non-standard employment can be regulated in very different social, political and institutional settings.

After surveying these new forms of work and the new demands for labour-market regulation, the authors identify possible solutions among local-level actors and provide a detailed analysis of how firms assess the advantages and disadvantages of flexible forms of employment. The authors provide six detailed case studies to examine the successes and failures of experimental approaches and social innovation in various regions in the UK, France, Germany, Italy and Spain.

chapter |3 pages

Introduction

chapter |32 pages

Flexible arrangements within companies

Strengths and weaknesses

chapter |26 pages

Non-standard employment

Experiments in regulation at the local level in Germany

chapter |31 pages

Between institutionalized concertation and experimentation

The regulation of new forms of employment in Lombardy

chapter |29 pages

Catalonia

The difficulty of transferring locally concerted solutions into firms

chapter |28 pages

The West Midlands

A mixture of promising and faltering steps