Economic Crisis, Quality of Work, and Social Integration
The European Experience
Edited by Duncan Gallie
Author Information
Duncan Gallie, Professor of Sociology and Official Fellow, Nuffield College, University of Oxford
Professor Duncan Gallie CBE FBA is an Official Fellow of Nuffield College, Oxford and Professor of Sociology in the University of Oxford. His research has focused on comparative European studies of the quality of employment and of unemployment. He has served on Advisory Committees of several European research institutions - IRESCO, L'IFRESI and the Paris School of Economics in France and The National Institute of Social Research in Denmark. He has advised the French government as a member of an expert group set up on psychosocial risks at work. He was a member of the EU Advisory Group on 'Social Sciences and Humanities in the European Research Area' for the Sixth Framework Programme. He served as Vice-President Social Sciences (2004-2006) and then as Foreign Secretary and Vice-President of the British Academy (2006-2011).
Contributors:
Duncan Gallie, Fellow of Nuffield College, Oxford and Professor of Sociology in the University of Oxford
Michael Tåhlin, Professor of sociology at the Swedish Institute for Social Research (SOFI), Stockholm University
Martina Dieckhoff, Senior Researcher, the Social Science Research Center Berlin (WZB)
Ying Zhou, Lecturer in Human Resource Management, the University of Surrey
Vanessa Gash, Lecturer in Social Statistics, CCSR, University of Manchester
Hande Inanc, Postdoctoral Research Officer, Nuffield College, University of Oxford
Frances McGinnity, Senior Research Officer, he Economic and Social Research Institute, Ireland
Helen Russell, Associate Research Professor, the Economic and Social Research Institute, Ireland
Nadia Steiber, Marie Curie Post-doctoral Fellow, Department of Political and Social Sciences, European University Institute
Dorothy Watson, Associate Research Professor, the Economic and Social Research Institute, Ireland
Javier Polavieja, Professor of Sociology, the Department of Economic History and Institutions, University Carlos III of Madrid