Inscribing Solidarity
Many governments, large institutions, and collective actors rely on the principle of solidarity to embed social policies on firm normative and legal grounds. In this original volume, a multidisciplinary roster of scholars come together to examine the contributions – and challenges –implicit in relying on the idea of solidarity to 'inscribe' this principle in social policies. Chapters explore how the dependence on the solidarity principle, and especially on inclusive understandings of solidarity, can strengthen or weaken institutions and movements. The volume's contributors cover developments across decades with a multilevel approach exploring dynamic interactions between local, national, and supranational arenas in pursuing and adjudicating the solidarity principle. Unique and innovative, Inscribing Solidarity examines the implications and dynamics of solidarity across a variety of terrains to illuminate its concrete limitations and specific advantages. This title is also available via Open Access on Cambridge Core.
- Specifies advantages and potential shortfalls of relying on the solidarity principle
- Identifies ways to promote the enforceability of policies and regulations rooted in the solidarity principle
- Highlights the central importance of the relation between the principles of solidarity and equality in theory and in practice
Reviews & endorsements
‘Solidarity lies at the very heart of employment law. This brilliant volume makes a powerful case for ensuring that it remains inscribed at the very heart of the discipline as we face labor market challenges from sustainability to global pandemics.’ Jeremias Adams-Prassl, Professor of Law, Oxford University, Author of Humans as a Service: The Promise and Perils of Work in the Gig Economy
‘This volume entails a thought-provoking analysis of the notion of solidarity, and makes an important contribution to the timely comparative discourse on the future of labour law, and its challenges and potential. A group of distinguished scholars examine solidarity from a number of key perspectives, including sustainability, migration, and the Covid-19 pandemic.’ Mia Rönnmar, Professor, Faculty of Law, Lund University, Sweden, and Past-President of ILERA (the International Labour and Employment Relations Association)
‘This book addresses one of the most pressing issues of our times. Until now, progressive politics has been built upon a shared sense of interest, cohesion, and mutual dependency amongst working and marginalized members of the population. Recently, business practices and neoliberal policies have individualized the work experience and hence undermined solidarity. These essays provide an in-depth examination of solidarity in the current context, and present an invaluable set of prescriptions for reclaiming and sustaining solidarity in today's world.’ Katherine Stone, Arjay and Frances Miller Distinguished Professor, UCLA School of Law
Product details
November 2022Hardback
9781009170277
280 pages
235 × 159 × 16 mm
0.43kg
Available
Table of Contents
- 1. Inscribing solidarity in labor law: promise and limitations Julia López López
- 2. Sustainability as solidarity unbound: Labour rights and collective voice in the United Nations sustainable development goals and the European Union Tonia Novitz
- 3. solidarity as a central aim of collective labour law? Reingard Zimmer
- 4. Solidarity: Different issues in a community perspective Gian Guido Balandi and Stefania Buoso
- 5. Solidarity, Covid-19 and a new social contract K. D. Ewing
- 6. Solidarity in the city Scott L. Cummings
- 7. Regulation of the access of undocumented migrants to social protection: Exploring the boundaries of solidarity Alexandre de le Court
- 8. Solidarity in hard times: The politics of labor market and social protection reform in Portugal (2010-2020) Rui Branco and Daniel Cardoso.