Proposals to privatise
the water company in Thessaloniki/Greece were overwhelmingly rejected in a
referendum on 18 May 2014 with 98 per cent of votes against. In this guest
post, his third contribution focusing on the privatisation of water, EPSU's Jan Willem Goudriaan gives an update of
the struggle of Greek workers against the austerity policies imposed upon them.
Monday 28 July 2014
Friday 25 July 2014
Exploited for a good cause? Campaigning against unpaid internships in the UK charity sector.
Unpaid
internships in businesses are considered by many to be unfair. However, what if
this unpaid work, takes place in a non-profit organisation purporting to fight
poverty and human rights abuses? As an intern for such a charity, Vera Weghmann
campaigned for workers’ rights, especially union recognition and fair pay,
while she was expected to work for free! Despite her great admiration for this
charity she and her fellow interns decided to campaign against this injustice.
After six months they had successfully managed to stop the charity’s use of
unpaid internships. In this guest post, Vera Weghmann tells her story:
Monday 21 July 2014
Hope for Change? Critical reflections on the potential of a renewed Labour government.
With the 2015
general elections on the horizon, there is again a sense of optimism amongst
left, progressive forces in the UK in view of a possible victory by the Labour
Party next year. After years of one austerity budget after another, brutal cuts
to public spending, job losses across the economy and intensified privatisation
of the public sector, removing the current ConDem government has become ever
more urgent. Nevertheless, what can we actually expect from a Labour
government? In this blog post, I will critically reflect on this issue
discussing two recent events, Len McCluskey’s, the
general secretary of the large trade union Unite, almost unconditional support for
Labour in the elections (BBC,
30 June 2014) and the Labour Party’s unwillingness to endorse and support
the strike by public sector workers on 10 July 2014 (OTS
News, 9 July 2014; Labour
List, 8 July 2014).
Thursday 10 July 2014
Form over Contents or the misguided discussions over the new President of the EU Commission.
David
Cameron, the British Prime Minister, was defeated in Brussels over his attempt
to block the appointment of Jean-Claude Juncker as the next President of the
European Commission, and yet celebrated at home in the UK for making a stand
against the appointment of a federalist at the helm of the Commission (BBC, 30 June 2014). In this
blog post, I will argue that these discussions between federalists, striving
towards a more strongly integrated Europe, and nationalists, attempting to
protect national sovereignty, are fruitless and misguided in view of the EU’s
current economic and social problems. They privilege the form of integration
over its contents, thereby blocking more substantial questions of how the
European political economy should be organised.
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