International Labour Review
1999 - 2024
Current editor(s): Mark Lansky
From International Labour Organization
Contact information at EDIRC.
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Volume 160, month 12, 2021
- The long discourse on informality as reflected in selected articles of the International Labour Review pp. e1-e11

- Ravi Kanbur
- Delving into the past – Looking to the future pp. e12-e31

- Tzehainesh Teklè
- Labour and technology: Reflecting on a century of debate in the International Labour Review pp. e32-e42

- Debra Howcroft and Jill Rubery
- The International Labour Review and gender equality: The importance of women's unpaid and paid work pp. e43-e51

- Nancy Folbre
- Towards inclusive collective industrial relations: Selected articles from the International Labour Review throughout the last century pp. e52-e65

- Gerhard Bosch
- Labour law in the 100 years of the International Labour Review pp. e66-e77

- Ruth Dukes, Judy Fudge and Guy Mundlak
- Tracking the changing discourse on development in the International Labour Review pp. e78-e91

- Jayati Ghosh and Uma Rani
- Introduction: Disruptions in global value chains – Continuity or change for labour governance? pp. 501-517

- Gary Gereffi, Anne Caroline Posthuma and Arianna Rossi
- Disruption in the apparel industry? Automation, employment and reshoring pp. 519-536

- Fernanda BÁRCIA de Mattos, Jeff Eisenbraun, David Kucera and Arianna Rossi
- Beyond “Industry 4.0": B2B factory networks as an alternative path towards the digital transformation of manufacturing and work pp. 537-552

- Florian Butollo and Lea Schneidemesser
- South Korean first‐tier suppliers in apparel global value chains: Upgrading and labour implications in the Asian context pp. 553-569

- Hyunji Kwon, Sun Wook Chung and Joonkoo Lee
- Why is the business case for social compliance in global value chains unpersuasive? Rethinking costs, prices and profits pp. 571-590

- Ana Antolin, Laura Babbitt and Drusilla Brown
- From Rana Plaza to COVID‐19: Deficiencies and opportunities for a new labour governance system in garment global supply chains pp. 591-609

- Stephen J. Frenkel and Elke S. Schuessler
- Three labour governance mechanisms for addressing decent work deficits in global value chains pp. 611-629

- Mark Anner
- Ripe to be heard: Worker voice in the Fair Food Program pp. 631-647

- Fabiola Mieres and Siobhán McGrath
- Gender and COVID‐19: Workers in global value chains pp. 649-667

- Sheba Tejani and Sakiko Fukuda‐parr
Volume 160, month 09, 2021
- Missing links in the inclusive growth debate: Functional income distribution and labour market institutions pp. 337-362

- Ignacio Alvarez, Maarten Keune, Jesús Cruces and Jorge Uxó
- Faltering standardization: Conflict and labour relations in China's taxi and sanitation industries pp. 363-385

- Hao Zhang and Eli Friedman
- Not as simple as it seems: The ILO and the personal scope of international labour standards pp. 387-406

- Valerio de Stefano
- The rise, demise and replacement of the Bangladesh experiment in transnational labour regulation pp. 407-430

- Youbin Kang
- Working‐time preferences among women: Challenging assumptions on underemployment, work centrality and work–life balance pp. 431-451

- Laura Lamolla, Conxita Folguera‐i‐bellmunt and Xavier Fernández‐i‐marín
- Internal migration, remittances and labour force participation in rural India: A gender perspective pp. 453-476

- Mohd Imran Khan and Ashapurna Baruah
- Determinants of inequality in Indian regular wage employment, 1993–2012 pp. 477-500

- Rahul Menon
Volume 160, month 06, 2021
- Making collective bargaining more inclusive: The role of extension pp. 169-195

- Susan Hayter and Jelle Visser
- Labour market flexibility in Indian manufacturing: A critical survey of the literature pp. 197-217

- Aditya Bhattacharjea
- Expectations versus reality: The well‐being of female migrant workers in garment factories in Myanmar pp. 219-242

- Hanh Nguyen
- The changing importance of lifetime jobs in the United Kingdom pp. 243-269

- Xavier St‐denis
- Health, cognition and work capacity beyond the age of 50: International evidence on the extensive and intensive margins of work pp. 271-310

- Vincent Vandenberghe
- Freedom at, through and from work: Rethinking labour rights pp. 311-329

- Nicolas Bueno
- Ajit Singh of Cambridge and Chandigarh: An Intellectual Biography of the Radical Sikh Economist, by Ashwani Saith pp. 331-335

- Sukti Dasgupta
Volume 160, month 03, 2021
- Labour is not a commodity: The content and meaning of work in the twenty‐first century pp. 1-20

- Alain Supiot
- The green factor: Unpacking green job growth pp. 21-41

- Nick Sofroniou and Pauline Anderson
- The performance effects of collective and individual bargaining: A comprehensive and granular analysis of the effects of different bargaining systems on company productivity pp. 43-64

- Nils Braakmann and Bernd Brandl
- The evaluation of workers by customers as a method of control and monitoring in firms: Digital reputation and the European Union's General Data Protection Regulation pp. 65-83

- Adrián Todolí‐signes
- Tasks, occupations and wages in OECD countries pp. 85-112

- Tommaso Agasisti, Geraint Johnes and Marco Paccagnella
- Upskilling and distributional changes in the electronics global value chain pp. 113-142

- Josep Lladós‐masllorens, Antoni Meseguer‐artola and Jordi Vilaseca‐requena
- Good jobs and bad jobs for Indonesia's informal workers pp. 143-168

- Christine Ablaza, Mark Western and Wojtek Tomaszewski
Volume 159, month 12, 2020
- Introduction: Transnational futures of international labour law pp. 455-462

- Adelle Blackett
- Engagement with sustainability at the International Labour Organization and wider implications for collective worker voice pp. 463-482

- Tonia Novitz
- The relationship between international law and European labour legislation and its impact on the development of international and European social law pp. 483-503

- Sophie Robin‐olivier
- On the International Labour Organization and prison labour: An invitation to recalibrate pp. 505-524

- Faina Milman‐sivan and Yair Sagy
- From Geneva to San José: The ILO standards and the Inter‐American System for the protection of human rights pp. 525-544

- Bernard Duhaime and Éloïse Décoste
- The Rana Plaza disaster seven years on: Transnational experiments and perhaps a new treaty? pp. 545-568

- Anne Trebilcock
- The trade–labour relationship in the light of the WTO Appellate Body's embrace of pluralism pp. 569-589

- Joanna Langille
- On social regionalism in transnational labour law pp. 591-613

- Adelle Blackett
- Short tribute to Sir William Randolph Douglas, KCMG, PC pp. 615-616

- Adelle Blackett and Julia Selman‐ayetey
Volume 159, month 09, 2020
- The future of work: Meeting the global challenges of demographic change and automation pp. 285-306

- Ana Lucia Abeliansky, Eda Algur, David E. Bloom and Klaus Prettner
- Employment effects of skills around the world: Evidence from the PIAAC pp. 307-338

- Damir Stijepic
- To what extent is social security spending associated with enhanced firm‐level performance? A case study of SMEs in Indonesia pp. 339-366

- Nina Torm
- Does deregulation decrease unemployment? An empirical analysis of the Spanish labour market pp. 367-396

- Daniel Herrero, Luis Cardenas del Rey and Julián LÓPEZ Gallego
- ISO 45001 and controversial transnational private regulation for occupational health and safety pp. 397-421

- Iñaki Heras‐saizarbitoria, Olivier Boiral and Ander Ibarloza
- Freedom of association in the Bangladeshi garment industry: A policy schizophrenia in labour regulation pp. 423-446

- Mia Mahmudur Rahim and Sk Samidul Islam
- Full and productive employment in developing economies: Towards the Sustainable Development Goals, by Rizwanul ISLAM pp. 447-449

- Sher Verick
- Research handbook on labour, business and human rights law, edited by Janice R. BELLACE and Beryl TER HAAR pp. 451-454

- Anne Trebilcock
Volume 159, month 06, 2020
- Technological change and employment in Brazil, Colombia and Mexico: Which workers are most affected? pp. 137-159

- John Ariza and Josep Lluís RAYMOND Bara
- Labour market turnover in Latin America: How intensive is it and to what extent does it differ across countries? pp. 161-193

- Luis Beccaria and Roxana Maurizio
- Photographs of young generations on the Dutch labour market pp. 195-215

- Sonja Bekker and Ioana Pop
- Inequality of opportunity and (unequal) opportunities in the youth labour market: How is the Arab world different? pp. 217-242

- Ralitza Dimova and Karim Stephan
- Measuring the effect of matching problems on unemployment pp. 243-258

- Ante Farm
- How does labour share respond to risk? Theory and evidence from the Chinese industrial sector pp. 259-281

- Jingxian Zou, Guangjun Shen and Shen Jia
- Principled labour law: U.S. labour law through a Latin American method, by Sergio Gamonal C. and César F. Rosado Marzán pp. 283-284

- Pablo ARELLANO Ortiz
Volume 159, month 03, 2020
- Back to the future: A continuity of dialogue on work and technology at the ILO pp. 1-23

- Miriam A. Cherry
- Labour geographies of the platform economy: Understanding collective organizing strategies in the context of digitally mediated work pp. 25-45

- Hannah Johnston
- Regulation and the future of work: The employment relationship as an innovation facilitator pp. 47-69

- Antonio Aloisi and Valerio de Stefano
- Measuring what matters and guiding policy: An evaluation of the Genuine Progress Indicator pp. 71-94

- Günseli Berik
- Labour and international accounting standards: A question of social justice pp. 95-115

- Samuel Jubé
- The tasks ahead of the ILO at its centenary pp. 117-136

- Alain Supiot