The Role of the State towards the Grey Zone of Employment: Eyes on Canada and the United States

In most countries, precarious working is on the rise and nonstandard forms of work are proliferating. What we call the “grey zone” of employment is generated by transformations at and with respect to work both in standard and nonstandard forms of working. Focusing on legal and policy regulation, and...

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Main Authors: Susan Bisom-Rapp, Urwana Coiquaud
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Association d'Economie Politique 2017-05-01
Series:Interventions Économiques pour une Alternative Sociale
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/interventionseconomiques/3555
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spelling doaj-f5a9931ee7e84ecf8f91b751187d14cd2020-11-24T20:42:55ZengAssociation d'Economie PolitiqueInterventions Économiques pour une Alternative Sociale0715-35701710-73772017-05-015810.4000/interventionseconomiques.3555The Role of the State towards the Grey Zone of Employment: Eyes on Canada and the United StatesSusan Bisom-RappUrwana CoiquaudIn most countries, precarious working is on the rise and nonstandard forms of work are proliferating. What we call the “grey zone” of employment is generated by transformations at and with respect to work both in standard and nonstandard forms of working. Focusing on legal and policy regulation, and on the role of the state in the creation and perception of the grey zone, our contribution explains the way the government acts or fails to act, and the consequences of that activity or inactivity on the standard employment relationship. Examining and juxtaposing conditions in our two countries, Canada and the United States, our thesis is that the state plays a paradoxical role in the growth of nonstandard work and increasing precariousness. To assist the analysis, we construct a matrix for understanding the efforts or inertia on the part of the government. We conclude that there are seven ways in which to comprehend the role played by the government vis-à-vis the grey zone.http://journals.openedition.org/interventionseconomiques/3555stategrey zonelabour lawnonstandard employment relationshipprecarious work
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Susan Bisom-Rapp
Urwana Coiquaud
spellingShingle Susan Bisom-Rapp
Urwana Coiquaud
The Role of the State towards the Grey Zone of Employment: Eyes on Canada and the United States
Interventions Économiques pour une Alternative Sociale
state
grey zone
labour law
nonstandard employment relationship
precarious work
author_facet Susan Bisom-Rapp
Urwana Coiquaud
author_sort Susan Bisom-Rapp
title The Role of the State towards the Grey Zone of Employment: Eyes on Canada and the United States
title_short The Role of the State towards the Grey Zone of Employment: Eyes on Canada and the United States
title_full The Role of the State towards the Grey Zone of Employment: Eyes on Canada and the United States
title_fullStr The Role of the State towards the Grey Zone of Employment: Eyes on Canada and the United States
title_full_unstemmed The Role of the State towards the Grey Zone of Employment: Eyes on Canada and the United States
title_sort role of the state towards the grey zone of employment: eyes on canada and the united states
publisher Association d'Economie Politique
series Interventions Économiques pour une Alternative Sociale
issn 0715-3570
1710-7377
publishDate 2017-05-01
description In most countries, precarious working is on the rise and nonstandard forms of work are proliferating. What we call the “grey zone” of employment is generated by transformations at and with respect to work both in standard and nonstandard forms of working. Focusing on legal and policy regulation, and on the role of the state in the creation and perception of the grey zone, our contribution explains the way the government acts or fails to act, and the consequences of that activity or inactivity on the standard employment relationship. Examining and juxtaposing conditions in our two countries, Canada and the United States, our thesis is that the state plays a paradoxical role in the growth of nonstandard work and increasing precariousness. To assist the analysis, we construct a matrix for understanding the efforts or inertia on the part of the government. We conclude that there are seven ways in which to comprehend the role played by the government vis-à-vis the grey zone.
topic state
grey zone
labour law
nonstandard employment relationship
precarious work
url http://journals.openedition.org/interventionseconomiques/3555
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