BRITISH JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS, ss.1-2, 2026 (SSCI, Scopus)
An impasse appears to have hit our collective imagination: from the catastrophic consequences of economic meltdowns and corporate bankruptcies to the transgression of planetary boundaries through environmental degradation and rising inequalities, social and economic life still continue to be governed by a business-as-usual logic. This situation raises a fundamental question: how did we arrive at a point where alternative political imaginaries are foreclosed, and the ideals of neoliberal economics have gained such a strong foothold? Panos Theodoropoulos’ recent book specifically focuses on the subjective dimension of migrant workers in the equation to explain how neoliberalism reproduces its own dominance through the internalization of precarity.