4 research outputs found

    A "zöld" innováció munka világát érintő kihívásai az EU 20-20 stratégia fényében

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    Less than a decade ago, the European Union was a completely new participant in the field of energy policy. The area itself is still considered to be innovative in many respects, as experience so far has shown that energy was almost exclusively a subunit within other regulatory issues. It first appeared as an autonomous area in 2007 in the Lisbon Treaty. The issue of energy could not remain in the background for too long however, as the environmental impacts of the current average level of life in most advanced economies can sometimes be drastic. The consequences of these effects have now become apparent to most people in their daily lives. Perhaps the most well-known of these effects and consequences is “climate change”, which may still be the subject of debate in some countries [for example by the political leadership of the United States (as analysed several times by local and world press)]. In order to alleviate the pressures on the environment, and stabilize the situation or even reverse it in the future, the European Union has set itself the objective of developing a viable energy policy in 2005 in order to create a sustainable economy along with the possibility to ensure a continuous development. The study analyses the most important documents regarding the energy policy of the European Union, such as National Environmental Action Plans, the Kyoto Protocol on Climate Change, the Renewable Energy Directive and the EU 2020 Strategy itself, while also placing special emphasis on the current situation of Hungary regarding its energy policy and social involvement in order to measure the potential of creating new workplaces in the process of investing into sustainability (at least from an energy perspective)

    Agreenment : travail et développement durable (environnement et négociation collective)

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    Agreenment–A Green Mentality for Collective Bargaining investigates the role of social dialogue and collective bargaining in promoting sustainable development and the Just Transition to a low-carbon economy in six countries: France, Hungary, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain and the UK
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