Institutional change and transformations in labour and employment standards: an analysis of ‘grey zones'
Bureau, Marie-Christine ; Dieuaide, Patrick
Transfer. European Review of Labour and Research
2018
24
3
August
261-277
work ; employment ; labour market ; regulation ; labour standard ; institutional reform
Labour market
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1024258918775573
English
Bibliogr.
"Initially employed by lawyers and geopolitical experts, the concept of ‘grey zones' can be usefully applied to analyse the recent changes on the labour market. It provides a means of bypassing the dualist approaches that contrast waged work and self-employment, insiders and outsiders, or, then again, formal and informal work in a binary way. It provides visibility of the decoherence between the institutions associated with waged status and actual employment practices, and the layering of several different kinds of regulation. The ‘grey zones' approach thus provides an analytical framework for understanding a wide variety of situations and studying various processes of institutional change, giving the actors of this change their rightful place. Although grey zones are often areas where laws are absent or weak, through these actors they can also give rise to new institutions. "
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