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OverviewIn Europe, work has long been a symbol of full citizenship and today work is a fundamental goal of European social policy. However, although every person has the 'right' to work, it is becoming clearer all the time that unemployment is not due merely to a lack of encouragement to exercise this right, but (at least in part) to some deeper defects in the implementation of effective employment policies. As a contribution to defining the nature of these problems, this important collection of essays targets the phenomena of multilevel governance, both vertical (European, national, regional, local) and horizontal (administrative institutions, trade unions, business representatives, NGOs), showing, with detailed analysis and data, how coordination or conflict between the various levels advances, or fails to advance, the goals of employment policy. Regarding the EU, five EU Member States are examined- plus, for comparative analysis, the parallel Canadian federal model - with the authors addressing such concrete issues as: - the impact of globalisation and Europeanisation on employment policies; - distribution of tasks in the Open Method of Coordination (OMC); - involvement of private and economic agents; - the increasing significance of international political agents; - flexicurity as an employment strategy; - the difficulty of integrating the excluded; - coordination with education and fiscal policies; - social inclusion from the point of view of international human rights; and - gender 'mainstreaming' as an essential element of the EU guarantee of gender equality. The essays originated in a research meeting held at the Instituto Internacional de Sociologia Juridica at Onati (Spain) in June of 2007. Some of the contributors, all employment law experts, discuss problematic aspects of the European Employment Strategy (EES) and its influence on the decentralization of employment policies and related elements of social protection. Other authors concentrate on 'built-in' multilevel problems resulting from existing constitutional and administrative structures, while a third group focuses on substantive approaches to employment policies within individual member states. The Bulletin contains updated versions of all papers. In this book the degree of administrative, legal, political, and cultural intricacy involved in a serious engagement with multilevel governance of employment on the European model is put on full view. As a deeply informed analysis of how the idea of multilevel governance has played out within the political and administrative reality of Member States, the book will prove of enormous value to labour and employment law professionals anywhere, as the problems identified here have a global reach. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Roger Blanpain , Brian Langille , J-P. LandaPublisher: Kluwer Law International Imprint: Kluwer Law International Volume: v. 71 ISBN: 9789041128669ISBN 10: 9041128662 Pages: 300 Publication Date: 24 April 2009 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock ![]() The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsAcknowledgements. Notes on the Authors. Introduction. Juan Pablo Landa & Brian Langille Part I The Framework Context of Europeanization of National Employment and Social Inclusion Policies 1. The Impact of Globalization on Employment and Social Inclusion Policies: Experiences and Proposals in Individual European Countries - Jean-Michel Servais 2. Looking at the EES in Search of Effectiveness and Efficiency of National Employment Policies and Social Protection Systems - Juan Pablo Landa Zapirain & Edurne Terradillos Ormaetxea 3. EES and European Social Inclusion Policy: Employment as a Means of Social Inclusion in an International Human Rights Perspective - Aranzazu FernaA ndez Urrutia & Nuria Pumar BeltraA n 4. The OMC as Decentralization of Regulations and Case Law: A Gender Mainstreaming Perspective - Julia LoA pez LoA pez Part II Multilevel Governance Experiences on Employment Policies in a Cross-National Perspective 5. The Reform of the Labour Market and of the Social Benefits for Unemployment in Germany - Maximilian Fuchs 6. The Reform of the Public Employment Service in France: Modernization and New Governance Issues - Philippe Auvergnon & Philippe Martin 7. Vocational Education Policies in the Process of Multilevel Governance: A French Perspective - Thierry Berthet & Pierre Iriart 8. Features and Limits of the Regionalization of Social and Employment Policies in Italy - Giancarlo Ricci 9. Centralization and Decentralization within the Spanish Model of Social Federalism: The Examples of Social Assistance and Employment Policies - Antonio Baylos, Jaime Cabeza & Maria Jose Romero 10. The Jobseeker's Allowance: A British Perspective on Job Activation - Jo Carby-Hall 11. Who Governs Labour Market Policy in Canada? - Brian A. LangilleReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |