Biletta, Isabella
Work on demand: Recurrence, effects and challenges
- Platform work
- Undeclared work
- Work organisation
- Working conditions
- Evenwicht tussen werk en privéleven
- Nieuwe vormen van werk
- Fraudulent work
- Het digitale tijdperk: kansen en uitdagingen op het gebied van werk en werkgelegenheid
- Werkgelegenheid en arbeidsmarkten
- Anticiperen op en omgaan met de gevolgen van verandering
- Arbeidsomstandigheden en duurzaam werk
13 december 2018
This report examines the issues in relation to ‘work on demand’, a topic that has received considerable attention in the media recently, mainly due to its links with the platform economy. Work on demand is often presented as a ‘win–win situation’: workers get to tailor their work according to their personal responsibilities outside work, while businesses can design their workforce according to their needs.
Does employment status matter for job quality?
22 november 2018
Two-thirds of the EU labour force are in permanent, full-time employment; the remaining one-third has a non-standard employment status, meaning temporary or part-time employment or self-employment. Given the variety of employment statuses, it is worth asking whether working conditions differ across them.
Women in management: Underrepresented and overstretched?
02 oktober 2018
Despite years of gender equality legislation, men outnumber women in management positions by two to one. While structural barriers continue to impede women’s career advancement, women themselves may be deterred from becoming managers if they perceive that it would have a negative impact on their working and personal lives.
Overview of new forms of employment - 2018 update
25 juli 2018
Across Europe, new forms of employment are emerging that differ significantly from traditional employment. Some of these forms of employment transform the relationship between employer and employee while others change work organisation and work patterns.
Stamping out fraud in hiring practices across Europe
01 juni 2018
Research Manager Isabella Biletta looks at fraudulent practices in the contracting of work. Such practices involve the abuse of legitimate employment relationships with the aim of sidestepping labour and social regulations and with the effect of undermining workers’ rights and fair competition in business. The article is based on several years of Eurofound research on the subject.
Exploring self-employment in the European Union
21 september 2017
In the rapidly changing world of work, the traditional dichotomy of employee and self-employed is insufficient to capture the wide diversity of self-employed workers in Europe today. This report identifies five categories of self-employed, ...
Fraudulent contracting of work: Bogus self-employment (Czech Republic, Spain and UK)
27 juli 2017
Across European countries, the ‘employment contract’ has been, and still is, the point of reference for determining the rights and obligations of both workers and employers. When direct subordinated employment is disguised as self-employment, it is termed ‘bogus’. Work can be contracted in several different ways. The main distinction remains the one between ‘employment’ and ‘self-employment’: this is a prominent feature in all European legal systems, built around the concepts of ‘subordination’ and ‘autonomy’.
Fraudulent contracting of work: Abusing fixed-term contracts (Belgium, Estonia and Spain)
27 juli 2017
Employment relations remain defined vis-à-vis the standard employment relationship (permanent, full-time, direct). Fixed-term contracts are therefore understood as non-standard employment contracts by which an employer hires an employee for a fixed duration. The main difference between permanent and fixed-term contracts is the certainty, in the latter employment situation, of the expiry date.
Fraudulent contracting of work: Abusing the posting of workers (Belgium, Finland and Italy)
27 juli 2017
Regulated at European level, the posting of workers is a practice used between companies located in different countries A worker is posted when their original employer sends them to work, for a temporary period, in another company. Posting has been defined as a specific form of labour mobility within the EU.
Fraudulent contracting of work: Sham companies (Austria, Estonia and Italy)
27 juli 2017
Among the fraudulent contracting of work practices, one of the most difficult to identify is the creation of sham companies (usually, in another country). Sham companies are essentially new entities created to disguise the real employer. Creating a company, even abroad, is – of course – legal and may well be institutionally and economically advisable.