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Funded Projects › H2020

LABOUR · Tackling informal employment in Asia: building post-COV19 solutions to precariousness through case-study based evidence on Bhutan, Laos, Maldives, Myanmar, Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam

H2020Status: SIGNED1 January 202231 December 2025EU funding €1,545,600Call H2020-MSCA-RISE-2020

According to the last WESO report, there are over 1.4bn workers in vulnerable jobs worldwide, with numbers expected to rise in 2020 due to COVID-19. Several attempts have been made at both domestic and international levels to address these concerns. This includes efforts through the Sustainable Development Goals process, which includes a specific statistical indicator to measure informal employment (8.3.1), the formulation of SDG8 (decent work) and SDG9 (sustainable industrialization). Across countries and world regions, the degree to which SDGs have been used to address youth issues and inform national policies varies significantly. Indeed, in spite of the fact that the great majority of states have formally committed to addressing the SDGs, including those related to insecure employment, there is little evidence to indicate that developing regions currently have the capacity to systematically study the problems if informal employment and vulnerability in ways that facilitate the development and implementation of concrete viable solutions. This is due, in our view, to two major challenges. First, although a number of approaches that have been used inside the EU, there has been little, if any, attempt to adapt the existing framework elsewhere. Second, no systematic review of anti-precariousness policy has been attempted beyond the EU region. LABOUR is a research and training programme designed to address the above-mentioned shortfalls of research and development approaches with particular attention to a region where this is particularly worrying concern. Informal employment in Asia is estimated to account for 68.2% of the active population. By gathering a team of 14 participants that includes academic and non-academic partners working on labour insecurity, we aim not only at producing specialists on the topic and on the region but also at proposing concrete mitigation measures that can be taken into account by decision-makers and development organisations.

Consortium · 17 organisations

coordinator

TALLINN UNIVERSITY

EE · €220,800

partner

KHMER YOUTH AND SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT ORGANIZATION

KH

partner

CHULALONGKORN UNIVERSITY

TH

participant

DUBLIN CITY UNIVERSITY

IE · €220,800

participant

UNIVERSITATEA DE STAT DIN MOLDOVA

MD · €248,400

participant

Iscte - Instituto Universitário de Lisboa

PT · €165,600

partner

GIVING FOR EARTH

MM

partner

CHITHUEN PHENDEY ASSOCIATION

BT

participant

UNIVERSITE LIBRE DE BRUXELLES

BE · €82,800

partner

CENTER FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT STUDIES

VN

participant

LATVIJAS UNIVERSITATE

LV · €193,200

partner

PAMBANSANG KILUSAN NG MGA SAMAHANGMAGSASAKA (PAKISAMA) INC

PH

participant

CENTRO EM REDE DE INVESTIGACAO EM ANTROPOLOGIA

PT · €55,200

partner

DHIVEHI RAAJEYGE QAUMEE UNIVERSITY

MV

participant

MARMARA UNIVERSITY

TR · €110,400

partner

PARTICIPATORY DEVELOPMENT KNOWLEDGE AGENCY

LA

participant

STOCKHOLMS UNIVERSITET

SE · €248,400

Research fields

View the official record on CORDIS →

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Source: CORDIS, Publications Office of the European Union. Global Research Partnerships surfaces open EU research data to help you find collaborators; we are not affiliated with the European Union.