Jump to ContentJump to Main Navigation

Chapter

Active Labour Market Policies: Between ‘Right to Work’ and ‘Workfare’

Mark Freedland, Paul Craig, Catherine Jacqueson and Nicola Kountouris

in Public Employment Services and European Law

Published in print September 2007 | ISBN: 9780199233489
Published online January 2009 | e-ISBN: 9780191716324 | DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199233489.003.0007

Series: Oxford Studies in European Law

Active Labour Market Policies: Between ‘Right to Work’ and ‘Workfare’

Preview

This chapter focuses on those employment measures commonly known as active labour market policies (ALMPs). It starts by providing a comparative historical analysis of ALMPs, suggesting that these measures effectively date back to the early 20th century. However, in recent years their content has been altered to encompass a higher proportion of supply-side measures, typically accompanied by more stringent qualifying criteria for the receipt of unemployment benefits. ALMPs have now become an effective mechanism for the control of the labour market. In light of these trends, the chapter questions the compatibility of some of the current forms of ALMPs with some notions of ‘right to work’ underpinned by human rights and decent work concerns.

Keywords: active labour market policies; ALMPs; decent work; OECD Jobs Strategy; European Employment Strategy; ILO

Chapter.  19276 words. 

Subjects: EU law

Go to Oxford Scholarship Online » abstract

full text: subscription required

How to subscribe Recommend to my Librarian

Buy this work at Oxford University Press »