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The effects of neoliberal capitalism on employment and mental health recovery among people with psychiatric disabilities 

Megan Evans explains that a capitalist economy relies on having a readily available workforce for low-wage, part-time jobs without benefits. These workers are kept afloat by a minimal social safety net when they are no longer needed by the market. Read more of the article

Implications of AI for the Future of Work for people with Serious Mental Illness  

People with serious mental illnesses (SMI) face unemployment rates of 75-85% and rely on inadequate benefits. Kendall Atterbury argues that as automation reduces job opportunities, stigma against those with psychiatric disabilities increases, highlighting the need to address the structural barriers they face in employment. Read more of the article

A place-based approach to fair pay and secure working hours 

On the Futures of Work blog, Ellie Farmahan describes the success of Living Wage UK in putting £3 billion into the pockets of workers over the last 20 years, and what still needs to be done to ensure more workers have security and enough to live on. Read more of the article

A pro-worker Labour government must scrap the ‘any jobs’ approach to welfare policy 

On the Futures of Work blog, Katy Jones highlights how the existing ‘any jobs’ approach to welfare taken by successive governments pushes people into poor-quality work which they then often struggle to get out of. Read more of the article

The New Deal for Working People: The labour interest in the national interest?

Frederick Harry Pitts shows that policies like the New Deal for Working People and their potential for accelerated rollout offer Labour a chance to campaign effectively, turning narrow marginal wins into secure Labour seats for a second term. Read more of the article

Austerity-driven policification: Police officers replace teaching assistants

Malte Laub considers the effect of austerity on the role of the police, who are now having to act as teaching assistants and mental health support workers, and pick up the pieces of a failed welfare state. Read more of the article

Why employees in finance are paid (a lot) more than everyone else and what does it mean for workers’ politics?

Iris Nikolopoulou analyses how the increasing influence of the financial sector has generated distinct paths in terms of working conditions between workers employed by private financial institutions and the rest of the economy. Read more of the article

How the rising influence of institutional investors undermines the bargaining power of trade unions

Thibault Darcillon and Yasmine Mohamed look at the link between the rise of institutional investors and the decreasing power of trade unions, and their consequent bargaining power. Read more of the article

#cancel_efood: Online solidarity to platform workers

Gregory Tsardanidis looks at the power of boycotting in the digital age, when used by workers fighting unfair employment conditions. Read more of the article

Another lesson from the pandemic: Minority voices within the collective do matter

On Futures of Work, Joyce Mamode considers the role of equality reps in workplaces during the pandemic in representing minority groups and encouraging managers to be more flexible and adaptable in their implementation of covid19 emergency policies. Read more of the article