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Featured researches published by Einat Albin.


Modern Law Review | 2010

Labour Law in a Service World

Einat Albin

Drawing on the genealogy of the theoretical thought about services in economic and geographical economic literature, I argue in this article that in todays Service World it is highly important to develop an integrated approach that sees both consumption and production as impacting work relationships within legal thought. The current structure of labour law, which is based on the Fordist model of employment, is centred mainly on the production side, thus creating an incongruity between labour law and services. I propose thinking about work relations through a new framework – ‘the nexus of service work’ – that incorporates consumerism into the legal thought of work relationships, detaching it from the Fordist model of employment to achieve a more attuned approach to todays Service World.


Theoretical Inquiries in Law | 2006

Bankruptcy Policy in Light of Manipulation in Credit Advertising

Ron Harris; Einat Albin

This Article argues that when credit suppliers market and advertise their credit products, they utilize and enhance consumers’ cognitive biases, particularly their optimism bias and illusion of control. We apply the concept of manipulation to this practice. The biased and manipulated debtors attribute unrealistically low probability to negative life events, such as job loss, illness, accident or divorce, and high probability to positive life events. As a result of the manipulation, the biased debtors are triggered to borrow more than they would have borrowed otherwise. This additional borrowing may contribute to the default of these debtors and to their eventual bankruptcy. Empirical studies of the causes of bankruptcy show that before their default, bankrupts have often experienced negative life events that decrease income, increase expenses, or both. The bias and its manipulation justify legal intervention. The Article discusses various justifications for legal intervention and offers tentative and partial prescriptions for intervention. It analyzes the comparative advantages and shortcomings of ex ante intervention, in the form of regulation of credit marketing practices and credit contracts, of tax and insurance, and ex post intervention, at the bankruptcy stage. Its main contribution is in bringing together bodies of literature on cognitive biases, consumer decision making, lifecycle, social influence, advertising and marketing, behavioral law and economics, economic analysis of bankruptcy and socio-legal studies of bankruptcy. By combining these bodies of literature, the Article provides a new perspective on bankruptcy and credit and offers a promising framework for future work.


Theoretical Inquiries in Law | 2016

Active Industrial Citizenship of Domestic Workers: Lessons Learned from Unionizing Attempts in Israel and the United Kingdom

Einat Albin; Virginia Mantouvalou

In this Article we offer a new conceptualization of industrial citizenship, which is sensitive to gender and migration status. Our conceptualization builds on the theoretical distinction between active and passive citizenship and the analyses of active industrial citizenship. We suggest that active industrial citizenship should be detached from the old and influential tradition of trade unionism that is connected with the public/private divide. Our proposed conceptualization leads to attaching value to activities related to ethics of care and to the pursuit of legal status, which should be seen as forms of activism. The discussion focuses on organizing domestic workers. We argue that this new conceptualization of active industrial citizenship leads to the recognition of domestic workers as active industrial citizens, rather than passive victims of abuse. It also transforms the way we view organizational forms within the labor market, making it possible to appreciate on an equal basis membership in trade unions and participation in NGOs and other civil society organizations, thereby building cooperation as well as taking part in other aspects of public life. We ground our argument on theoretical literature as well as a qualitative study, a series of interviews with key trade union and NGO actors with expertise in organizing and supporting domestic workers in Israel and the United Kingdom.


Industrial Law Journal | 2012

The ILO Convention on Domestic Workers: From the Shadows to the Light

Virginia Mantouvalou; Einat Albin


Industrial Law Journal | 2011

A Worker–Employer–Customer Triangle: The Case of Tips

Einat Albin


Oxford Journal of Legal Studies | 2014

Union Responsibility to Migrant Workers: A Global Justice Approach

Einat Albin


Archive | 2013

From 'Domestic Servant' to 'Domestic Worker'

Einat Albin


Industrial Law Journal | 2013

The Case of Quashie: Between the Legalisation of Sex Work and the Precariousness of Personal Service Work

Einat Albin


Michigan journal of gender & law | 2017

Customer Domination at Work: A New Paradigm for the Sexual Harassment of Employees by Customers

Einat Albin


Archive | 2016

Employees, Employers, and Beyond

Jeremias Prassl; Einat Albin

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