6. Recommended Further Reading
Arabadjieva, Kalina et al, ‘Introduction: The Labour–Environment Nexus — Exploring New Frontiers in Labour Law’ (2023) 39(3/4) International Journal of Comparative Labour Law and Industrial Relations 271
Crawford, Ben and David Whyte, ‘Workers on the Front Line of Climate Change: Re-Politicizing Trade Union Climate Action’ (2025) 164(1) International Labour Review <https://en.ilr-rit.org/article/pubid/18838/>
Deakin, Simon, ‘Labour Law and the “Capitalocene”: Law, Work and Nature in the Ecological Long Durée’ (2023) 39(3/4) International Journal of Comparative Labour Law and Industrial Relations 281
Flanagan, Frances, ‘Just Cessation: How Might the Climate Imperative to Phase Out Fossil Fuel Extraction Reshape the Concept of Just Transition?’ (2023) 39(3/4) International Journal of Comparative Labour Law and Industrial Relations 393
Golding, Gabrielle, Phillipa McCormack and Kerryn Brent, ‘The Changing Climate of Australian Employment Law’ (2023) 46(4) University of New South Wales Law Journal 1284
Novitz, Tonia, ‘Engagement with Sustainability at the International Labour Organization and Wider Implications for Collective Worker Voice’ (2020) 159(4) International Labour Review 463
Routh, Supriya, ‘Embedding Work in Nature: The Anthropocene and Legal Imagination of Work as Human Activity Work Regulation and Environmental Sustainability’ (2018) 40(1) Comparative Labor Law & Policy Journal 29
Tham, Joo-Cheong, ‘Labour Law and Climate Change’ in Alysia Blackham and Sean Cooney (eds), Research Methods in Labour Law: A Handbook (Edward Elgar Publishing, 2024)
Zbyszewska Ania, ‘Regulating Work with People and “Nature” in Mind: Feminist Reflections’ (2018) 40(1) Comparative Labor Law & Policy Journal 9