Labor Migration as a Source of Institutional Change: Danish and Australian Construction Sectors Compared In a new article Jens Arnholtz and Chris F. Wright examines the impact of increased labor migration on skill-sourcing practices in countries with distinct national skill formation and industrial relations institutions.
Strategic human resource management in the context of environmental crises: A COVID-19 test New article investigates whether existing stretegic human resource management frameworks can adequately frame and deliver the academic knowledge needed to address the novel challenges posed by the pandemic.
Social dialogue in welfare services A new report takes a closer look at key welfare service sectors, long-time care and early childhood education and care in seven EU countries
Business and welfare policies Mikkel Mailand analyzes the roles and preferences of Danish companies and employers' organizations in relation to four 'welfare policy' areas - unemployment, (further) education, pensions and family-working life.
Philosopher: Mindfulness rests on dubious philosophical foundations Mindfulness is one of the most widespread forms of therapy for people suffering from stress, and many report that they benefit greatly from it. However, the philosophical assumptions on which mindfulness is based are…
An ode to people who work in labs With a short film, Postdoc Thomas Hughes has delivered an atypical anthropological product at the outskirts of academia – even though the film is celebrating science.
Nordic Relief Packages and Non-standard Workers: Towards Expanded Universalism and Institutional Inequalities In a new article in the Nordic Journal of Working Life Studies Trine P. Larsen and Anna Ilsøe have analyzed how the Nordic countries have reacted to the Corona crisis, which revealed gaps in the Nordic countries' social…
Do Workers Speak Up When Feeling Job Insecure? Examining Workers’ Response to Precarity During the COVID-19 Pandemic In a new article Christian Lyhne Ibsen et al. examines whether workers respond to job insecurity with voice, and assess the role of unions, managers, and employment arrangements in this relationship
Postdoctoral researcher position working on two new survey projects on welfare and the future of work The Employment Relations Research Centre (FAOS) invites applications for a fixed-term postdoctoral researcher position (3 years and 3 months) starting on 1 March 2023 or as soon as possible thereafter.
Mobilization and collective bargaining on Facebook In a new article Nana Wesley Hansen and Mark Friis Hau analyze how trade unions and their grass roots use Facebook and what consequences this has for the understanding of collective bargaining.
"I come to work and it smells wonderfully of animals, everywhere" Where did your interest in science come from? As a kid, I was always curious about how stuff worked, especially aeroplanes and cars. But I’ve always been interested in both technology and nature — and I remember being…
Playing alone? Interest representation in the videogame industry in Denmark, Italy and the Netherlands In a new article in Economic and Industrial Democracy Mikkel Mailand and Trine P. Larsen et al. examines the examines the interest representation in the gaming industry in Denmark, Italy and the Netherlands.
Tripartite agreements helped Denmark through the pandemic A new analysis by Christian Lyhne Ibsen shows how a large number of tripartite agreements were instrumental in avoiding economic meltdown and mass layoffs during the Covid-19 pandemic
New Head of the Department of Economics: We need more female colleagues Henrik Hansen will take up the position as the new Head of the Department of Economics 1 March 2023. One of the priorities on his to-do list is a more equal gender distribution in a male-dominated field.
Still a poster child for social investment? Caroline de la Porte, Trine P. Larsen, Åsa Lundqvist investigates the regulation of publicly organized early childhood education and care (ECEC) in Denmark and Sweden
Diverging logics of firm cooperation in Denmark and Sweden In a new article Christian Lyhne Ibsen, Lisa Sezer and Virginia Doellgast explores how differences in business association structures relate to the ways firms cooperate in competitive markets.
Professional scaling work Professional scaling work: How professional segments claim new jurisdictions in a world of trans-local connections Associate Professors Anders Blok and Inge Kryger Pedersen have contributed the article 'Professional…
Hybrid Work Patterns: A Latent Class Analysis of Platform Workers in Denmark This paper presents a novel approach for studying differences and similarities among platform workers, by taking into account the wider labor market position of platform workers. Analytically, we seek inspiration from…
International journal to strengthen the dialogue between research and business The international Journal of Business Anthropology relocates to the Department of Anthropology at UCPH.
Sociology is ready with a new shared ambition for inclusion and diversity At the Department of Sociology, there is now agreement on what it should be like to work and study at the department in the future. The shared ambition is part of Project Dignity.
Labor Market Affiliation of Marginal Part-Time Workers in Denmark — A Longitudinal Study Anna Ilsøe og Trine Pernille Larsen has contributed to an article that examines the relation between marginal part-time work and future career opportunities
Varieties of organised decentralisation acrosssectors in Denmark: A company perspective Trine P. Larsen and Anna Ilsøe examines why and to what extent the parties in Danish workplaces take advantage of the opportunities to negotiate locally