
Zbyszewska, Ania
Ania Zbyszewska is a Assistant Professor at the Carleton University. She obtained her doctorate in Law and Society from University of Victoria, Faculty of Law (Canada) in November 2012. She researches the intersection of law and politics, particularly in relation to the laws regulating labour market and employment in the context of the European Union (EU) and its post-socialist members. Drawing on feminist theories of law and political economy.
Research Interests: EU Labour and Employment Policy and Regulation, Law and Gender, Feminist Political Economy, Multilevel Regulation, and Poland
Listing Details
Institution: | Carleton University |
Fields of Expertise: | EU Multi-level Governance EU Policies Gender Politics and Policy Social Policy, Welfare and Labour Market |
Research groups: | The ECSA-C members |
Email: | ania.zbyszewska@carleton.ca |
Media outreach: | Yes |
Languages: | English, Polish |
Publications: | Zbyszewska, A. 2016. Gendering European Working Time Regimes: The Working Time Directive and the Case of Poland (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press). Benedi-Lahuerta, S., Zbyszewska, A., 2018. “EU Equality Law after a Decade of Austerity: On the Social Pillar and its Transformative Potential.” International Journal of Discrimination and the Law 18(2-3), 162-192. Kresal, B., Zbyszewska, A., 2017. “Through Work-Life-Family Reconciliation to Gender Equality? Slovenia and the United Kingdom’s Legal Frameworks Compared.” Bulletin of Comparative Labour Relations (on Work Life Balance) vol 98, 155-182. 2016. “Reshaping the European Working-time Regime: Towards a Sustainable Model.” European Labour Law Journal 7(3): 331-347. “Regulating Working Time in the Times of Crisis: Flexibility, Gender and the Case of Long Hours in Poland.” International Journal of Comparative Labour Law and Industrial Relations (Forthcoming January 2013). “The European Working Time Directive: Keeping the Long Hours with Gendered Consequences.” Women’s Studies International Forum, Special Issue: The Unintended Gender Consequences of EU Policy, edited by Jill Attwood and Heather McRae (In Press; Article Published Online: 17 April 2012). “Unveiling the Politics of Gender in the European Union Working-Time Regulation – a Recipe for Social Reproduction in Crisis or Crisis in Social Reproduction?” European Union Centre for Excellence, York University, Toronto, Ontario Working Paper Series. Published online May 2010. |