Industrial
Conference

Industrial Relations in a Changing World of Work (IREC 2025)

When:
From:
TUE, 16 SEPT 2025, 9:00 AM
To:
THU, 18 SEPT 2025, 3:00 PM
Where:
Casino syndical

Chambre des Salariés, Casino syndical, 63 Rue de Bonnevoie, L-1260 Luxembourg

Casino Syndical de Bonnevoie
With:
Richard Hyman
Professor Richard Hyman
Maite Tapia
Associate Professor Maite Tapia
RenaudBecot
Associate Professor Renaud Bécot
Partners:
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Registration
To participate in the event, please REGISTER via this link


Registration fees: 350 EUR (PhD Students: 275 EUR).

In recent years, there has been a discernible shift in the discourse on industrial relations in Europe. Contentious collective bargaining in response to surging inflation, tighter labour markets leading to a stronger bargaining position for workers, renewed strike activity in many countries and organising drives in the low-wage service sector have been noticeable developments. These changes contrast with the preceding decades marked by the erosion of sectoral collective bargaining and associated institutions.

At the same time, new challenges have emerged. Many governments have imposed new restrictions on trade union action, particularly strikes. The rise of (temporary and platform) on-demand work across the world challenges established modes of regulating employment relations. Digitalisation leads to changes in job roles and skills requirements, creating new jobs while simultaneously displacing existing ones. Industrial relations actors also confront the need to address the impact of climate change on the world of work. Decarbonisation and tightened climate policies have an impact on jobs in manufacturing and power generation, and require job transitions and reskilling. Rising temperatures and more frequent extreme weather events make it necessary to adapt workplaces, in particular regarding occupational health and safety. Emerging collective actors may take up the issues of digitalisation and climate change either in alliance or in competition with the established trade unions.

The effects of digitalisation and climate change vary among different groups of workers. This risks creating further disparities in working conditions across socio-economic categories, gender, ethnicity and race, raising the issue of the inclusiveness of trade unions, workplace representation bodies and collective bargaining institutions. The electoral successes of the far right across Europe pose the question of trade union action aimed at safeguarding the rights of migrant workers and refugees.

We invited innovative papers that reflect on the current state and future of industrial relations in Europe. In particular, authors were encouraged to address questions related to the following main topical clusters:

  • The role of social dialogue in the twin transitions (digitalisation and decarbonisation).
  • Enacting a Just Transition in regional and sectoral settings.
  • Temperatures rises, extreme weather events and occupational safety and health.
  • Well-being at work in changing times: remote and hybrid work, hyper-connectivity, the right to disconnect, and the rise of platform work.
  • Adjusting legal frameworks and collective bargaining for digitalisation and emerging types of work (platform work).
  • State regulation of collective bargaining and trade union activity.
  • The role of employer organisations and trade unions in multi-employer collective bargaining.
  • Emerging actors in industrial relations.
  • New challenges for worker participation and labour relations at the company and workplace level in Europe.
  • The debates around Social Europe and Val Duchesse reloaded.
  • Inflation and collective bargaining.
  • The return of strikes.
  • Equality and diversity in workplace representation and collective bargaining.
  • Structural inequalities and industrial relations.
  • Migration and cross-border labour markets in Europe.

Scientific Committee

Sophie Béroud (Université Lumière Lyon 2), Carole Blond-Hanten (LISER), Franz Clément (LISER), Nadja Doerflinger (BAuA), Camille Dupuy (Université Rouen Normandie), Isil Erdinc (Université libre de Bruxelles), Baptiste Giraud (Université Aix-Marseille), Rebecca Gumbrell-McCormick (Birkbeck, University of London), Richard Hyman (LSE), Emilien Julliard (CNRS, Paris Nanterre), Vassil Kirov (Bulgarian Academy of Sciences), Valeria Pulignano (KU Leuven), Patrick Thill (LISER), Adrien Thomas (LISER), Karel Yon (CNRS, Paris Nanterre).


Partners

The IREC 2025 Conference is organised with the support of the European Sociological Association Research (Network 17 − Work, Employment and Industrial Relations) and the Chamber of Employees (Chambre des Salariés, Luxembourg).


About the Conference

The conference will be held in-person.


Program (tbc)
1:00 PM - 2:00 PM
Welcome and Registration
Keynote speakers
Richard Hyman
Professor Richard Hyman
London School of Economics, UK
Professor Hyman has been one of the most prominent figures in British and European employment relations research for most of the past four decades. He has written extensively on the themes of comparative industrial relations, collective bargaining, trade unionism, industrial conflict and labour market policy. His books have encouraged generations of students, researchers, and activists to view the employment relationship in its wider social and political context.
Maite Tapia
Associate Professor Maite Tapia
Michigan State University, US
Maite Tapia is an Associate Professor and Doctoral Program Chair at the School of Human Resources and Labor Relations at Michigan State University. Her research focuses on worker voice within the workplace as well as worker organizing and movement-building within the broader society, confronting specifically workers' social identities and systemic inequality.
RenaudBecot
Associate Professor Renaud Bécot
Sciences Po Grenoble, France
My work lies at the intersection of environmental history and the social history of the world of work, focusing primarily on Western Europe in the twentieth century.
ChristineAumayr
Dr. Christine Aumayr-Pintar
Eurofound, Dublin
Christine Aumayr-Pintar is a senior research manager in the Working Life unit at Eurofound. Her current research topics include minimum wages, collectively agreed wages and gender pay transparency. She also manages the EU PolicyWatch database. From the end of 2022, she will take up the coordination of Eurofound’s research on industrial relations and social dialogue, while also managing the Network of Eurofound Correspondents (NEC). Before joining Eurofound in 2009, she worked as a researcher in labour markets and regional economics at Joanneum Research, Austria. She studied economics in Graz, Vienna and Jönköping and holds a Master’s degree and a PhD in Economics.
IREC_Call4Papers.pdf
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Industrial Relations in a Changing World of Work

If you have any questions about the event, please contact us.

Event organizer:
Adrien Thomas (LISER), Anna Dober (LISER), Patrick Thill (LISER), Franz Clément (LISER), Carole Blond-Hanten (LISER).
IREC2025@liser.lu

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In recent years, there has been a discernible shift in the discourse on industrial relations in Europe. Contentious collective bargaining in response to surging inflation, tighter labour markets leading to a stronger bargaining position for workers, renewed strike activity in many countries and organising drives in the low-wage service sector have been noticeable developments. These changes contrast with the preceding decades marked by the erosion of sectoral collective bargaining and associated institutions.