Digital Economy and the European Labour Market

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Behavioural Economics
Category=KCF
Digital Cultural Management
Digital Economy
Digital Labour
Digital Skills
Digital Transformation
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
EU Country
EU Labour Market
flexible digital labour relations
Flexible Forms
Follow
Gig Economy
industry 4.0 employment
Interim Management
Job Sharing
Labour Market
Labour Market Dualism
labour market segmentation
non-standard employment
Non-standard Forms
Platform Economy
Platform Work
platform work research
Professional Development
Regional Resilience
Remote Work
remote work trends
skill-based workforce
Smooth
Temporary Agency Work
Unlimited
Work Life Balance

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032184586
  • Weight: 557g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 21 Jul 2022
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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With a focus on the European labour market, this book seeks to understand how digital transformation affects changes in employee-employer relations. These consequences include shifts in job security and job flexibility as well as alternative work arrangements in the digital economy. This phenomenon has both positive and negative implications for employees and employers.

The book presents a theoretical, conceptual and empirical analysis of employment relations in the digital economy, which are manifested, among others, in flexible or non-standard forms of employment, contract work and a radical shift from position-based to skill-based work.

The approach taken in the book provides researchers and students of economics, business and other social sciences with an overview of interdisciplinary theoretical and conceptual perspectives and frameworks on labour market and employment relations. In particular, it presents a comprehensive range of research on flexible forms of employment in the digital economy. The range of issues covered is also tailored to business practitioners who wish to understand the ongoing changes in employment relations and the emergence of new forms of work as a result of digital transformation. It will also be of value to representatives of labour market institutions involved in implementing new forms of work and employer-employee relationships in Industry 4.0.

Maria Urbaniec is an Associate Professor and Head of the Department of Entrepreneurship and Innovation at Cracow University of Economics, Cracow, Poland.