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// Politics of work

Public attitudes offer a future government more scope on immigration than it might think

Heather Rolfe argues that data on public attitudes towards immigrants reveals that the party forming the next government does not have to fear being pro-migration. Read more of the article

Enhancing Syrian refugee entrepreneurs versus restrictive and disorganised migration management in Turkey

Hülya Kaya looks at the case of syrian refugees in Turkey. Where refugees’ entrepreneurial abilities are hampered, she argues, it is bad for both individuals and the economy. Read more of the article

The post-Carrie Bradshaw era in China: When women’s singlehood became a ‘problem’ in society and the workplace

On Futures of Work, Ne Ma looks at the struggle in the workplace for single women in China. On the one hand they’re stigmatised for not being married with children in a culture with declining birthrates, on the other hand they’re seen as a ‘maybe baby’ risk by employers. Read more of the article

Labour’s new politics of production?

The politics of work and the politics of value

Starmer at work: Will Labour’s new ‘politics of work’ achieve workplace dignity?

Levelling up or letting down? The government’s failed promises for working people

For a New Political Economy of Defence

Labour and Democracy in the Age of Geopolitical Anxiety

China, Geopolitical Rivalry and the Future of Work in Europe