In many European countries, marginal part-time, (solo-) self-employment and secondary jobs has been increasing since the last decades. The ques-tion about the provision of social protection and labour legislation for these types of employment is the starting point for a project entitled Hybrid working arrangements in Europe, directed by the WSI. Germany, Great Britain, the Netherlands, Poland, Italy, Denmark and Austria comprise the group of countries selected in order to investigate hybrid work in the context of different welfare state regimes. The following paper by Marcello Pedaci, Dario Raspanti and Luigi Burroni is one of the seven country stud-ies that describe in detail labour law regulations and the national insurance systems for self-employed, secondary jobs and marginal part-time em-ployment.
%0 Generic
%1 noauthororeditor
%A Pedaci, Marcello
%A Raspanti, Dario
%A Burroni, Luigi
%D November 2017
%E Hans-Böckler-Stiftung,
%K Solo-Selbstständige Standards_für_digitale_Arbeitsformen Zukunft_der_Beschäftigung_und_Beruflichkeit_4.0 Soziale_Sicherung
%T Autonomous, atypical, hybrid forms of employment : aspects of social protection in Italy: National Report
%U https://www.boeckler.de/pdf/p_wsi_studies_10_2017.pdf
%X In many European countries, marginal part-time, (solo-) self-employment and secondary jobs has been increasing since the last decades. The ques-tion about the provision of social protection and labour legislation for these types of employment is the starting point for a project entitled Hybrid working arrangements in Europe, directed by the WSI. Germany, Great Britain, the Netherlands, Poland, Italy, Denmark and Austria comprise the group of countries selected in order to investigate hybrid work in the context of different welfare state regimes. The following paper by Marcello Pedaci, Dario Raspanti and Luigi Burroni is one of the seven country stud-ies that describe in detail labour law regulations and the national insurance systems for self-employed, secondary jobs and marginal part-time em-ployment.
@standard{noauthororeditor,
abstract = {In many European countries, marginal part-time, (solo-) self-employment and secondary jobs has been increasing since the last decades. The ques-tion about the provision of social protection and labour legislation for these types of employment is the starting point for a project entitled Hybrid working arrangements in Europe, directed by the WSI. Germany, Great Britain, the Netherlands, Poland, Italy, Denmark and Austria comprise the group of countries selected in order to investigate hybrid work in the context of different welfare state regimes. The following paper by Marcello Pedaci, Dario Raspanti and Luigi Burroni is one of the seven country stud-ies that describe in detail labour law regulations and the national insurance systems for self-employed, secondary jobs and marginal part-time em-ployment.},
added-at = {2017-12-12T12:05:09.000+0100},
author = {Pedaci, Marcello and Raspanti, Dario and Burroni, Luigi},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/23395d1485d80c4efb64a1c1eea7ed556/zukunftarbeit},
editor = {Hans-Böckler-Stiftung},
interhash = {eecf053fb51fc6dcdac93dfdc6c67d52},
intrahash = {3395d1485d80c4efb64a1c1eea7ed556},
keywords = {Solo-Selbstständige Standards_für_digitale_Arbeitsformen Zukunft_der_Beschäftigung_und_Beruflichkeit_4.0 Soziale_Sicherung},
timestamp = {2020-07-04T15:30:19.000+0200},
title = {Autonomous, atypical, hybrid forms of employment : aspects of social protection in Italy: National Report},
url = {https://www.boeckler.de/pdf/p_wsi_studies_10_2017.pdf},
year = {November 2017}
}