The Regulation of the Working Environment in the New Member Accession States of the Enlarged European Union

"Although formal transposition of EU directives is largely complete, support for occupational health and safety regulation is limited among business and political elites in the new member accession states of Central and Eastern Europe. An unacknowledged gap exists between successful legal trans...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Woolfson, Charles
Institution:ETUI-European Trade Union Institute
Format: TEXT
Language:English
Published: European Centre for Occupational Health, Safety and Environment 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-19138765124919569479-The-Regulation-of-the-Working-.htm
Description
Summary:"Although formal transposition of EU directives is largely complete, support for occupational health and safety regulation is limited among business and political elites in the new member accession states of Central and Eastern Europe. An unacknowledged gap exists between successful legal transposition, and current evidence of a deteriorated working environment. In addition, weaknesses in workplace social dialogue imply that the European Commission's current emphasis on 'soft law', in particular, the Open Method of Co-ordination relying on 'corporate social responsibility', 'best practice' and self-regulatory 'preventative safety cultures', may be inappropriate in securing safety and health at work in the new member accession states from Central and Eastern Europe. Prospects for the future regulatory regime are, therefore, uncertain." (Author's abstract)
Physical Description:42 p.
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