Wednesday, July 16, 2025
From a book edited by Ulrich Mückenberger, Heiner Fechner, and Irene Dingeldey:
“The volume Constructing Worlds of Labour aims to break new ground in presenting results on different types of labour standards around the world as regulatory social policy. The specifc topic is to make visible that, and to explain why, employment law worldwide not only has a protective role but also a segmenting role—creating social differentiation based on status, gender and/or race. We conceptualised this role of law as legal segmentation and identifed various historical and power-related reasons for it. We also want to identify how segmenting employment law interacts with segmentative implications of other (current and/or historical) legal institutions—such as social law, family law, tax law, but also legislation based on slavery, gender, race and ethnicity. As explanations, not only path dependent institutional developments are the subject of in-depth investigations but also colonial infuences, international organisations and
epistemic communities including postcolonial thought. The research outcomes are comprehensively discussed in order to derive propositions on how to overcome the described situation in the different worlds of labour. Hence, not only applying a global perspective but also treading new paths in interdisciplinary co-operation—both theoretically/normatively and empirically—makes this book outstanding.”
Continue reading here.
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