Onomazein

Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile
ISSN: 07171285, 07185758

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SCImago
Q2
WOS
Q4
Impact factor
0.3
SJR
0.247
CiteScore
0.6
Categories
Linguistics and Language
Areas
Social Sciences
Years of issue
2011-2023
journal names
Onomazein
Onomázein Revista de lingüística filología y traducción
Publications
45
Citations
235
h-index
7
Top-3 citing journals
Spanish in Context
Spanish in Context (14 citations)
Journal of Pragmatics
Journal of Pragmatics (11 citations)
SSRN Electronic Journal
SSRN Electronic Journal (9 citations)

Most cited in 5 years

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from chars
Publications found: 803
The non-take-up of means-tested income supplementation schemes
Wever M.
Q2
SAGE
European Journal of Social Security 2025 citations by CoLab: 0  |  Abstract
Income supplementation benefits aim to provide additional financial support to low-income municipal residents for expenses insufficiently covered by their primary income sources. In the Netherlands, the non-take-up of these benefits is particularly high and relatively underexamined. This study investigates factors influencing the decision not to claim income supplementation benefits, by surveying approximately 3500 low-income residents of a Dutch municipality. Using hypothetical scenarios where all participants are considered potentially eligible for certain local welfare benefits, the research explores the impact of shared scheme characteristics, trust in government, and the fear of reclaims and fines. The findings reveal that stringent requirements, such as extensive proof of financial need and restrictions on spending autonomy, are likely barriers to participation. Additionally, a lack of trust in the government and concerns about potential reclaims or penalties further discourage participation. These insights underscore the need for policies to improve the accessibility of income supplementation schemes.
The conflict rules of European social security coordination in a digital labour market – bridging lex loci laboris and remote work by disregarding marginal cross-border activities
Tandberg P.S.
Q2
SAGE
European Journal of Social Security 2025 citations by CoLab: 0  |  Abstract
The article explores the complexities of determining the social security legislation applicable to employees engaged in cross-border remote work under Title II of Regulation (EC) 883/2004. Using remote work as a case study, it analyses the systematic interplay of various conflict rules. Social security legislation is traditionally tied to the physical location of employment ( lex loci laboris ), but the rise of remote work disrupts this paradigm, potentially causing frequent shifts in applicable legislation whenever employees work from different Member States. This ‘ping-pong effect’ may undermine legal certainty, impose administrative burdens and jeopardise workers’ social security rights. The article critically evaluates the EU Administrative Commission's Guidance Note on telework, which promotes a flexible interpretation of exceptions under Articles 12, 13 and 16 of Regulation (EC) 883/2004. While these exceptions help to resolve some difficulties, the author argues that the Administrative Commission fails to address the fundamental issue: at what point does cross-border remote work trigger a change in jurisdiction under the main rule in Article 11(3)(a)? The findings suggest that marginal activities – defined as constituting less than 5% of total working time and/or remuneration – should be disregarded within simultaneous and alternating working patterns under lex loci laboris . Such an approach allows the ‘usual’ State of employment to retain jurisdiction, thereby ensuring continuous affiliation for workers. Exclusion of de minimis activities is presented as a proportionate outcome, supported by the fundamental freedoms of free movement in primary EU law.
Minimum income schemes for the elderly: A comparative analysis of benefit conditions that may affect their right to live in dignity
Devetzi S., Pennings F.
Q2
SAGE
European Journal of Social Security 2025 citations by CoLab: 0  |  Abstract
The Union recognises and respects the right to lead a life in dignity (Article 25 Charter of Fundamental rights). This right, it is argued, not only requires an adequate income protection, but also addresses the conditions under which this is provided. In view of the conditions that are often linked to minimum income schemes for the elderly—waiting periods, entitlement to other pensions, calculation rules, means tests, restrictions on the possibilities to move abroad—we studied the minimum income schemes for the elderly of nine EU Member States in order to examine how they work out for persons who have been insured in more than one Member State and those who move to another country after retirement. It appears that minimum income protection sometimes has to be claimed from more than one scheme, that the conditions and calculation rules are extremely complicated, and that frequently the relationship with coordination rules for social security is unclear or even ignored. It is also hard to understand the need for the distinction between the schemes. It is argued, on the basis of these findings, that minimum income schemes for the elderly need particular attention from EU institutions and Member States, because of their present lack of transparency, the problematic coordination of national schemes, the impact on the possibilities of free movement and the (probable) problems with take-up. The article thus wants to contribute to the further development of the concept of living in dignity and provides materials for elaborating the Council recommendations on minimum income and on access to social protection.
Crossing borders and moving frontiers: Coordinating European social security for modern cases of global mobility
Rewucha A.
Q2
SAGE
European Journal of Social Security 2024 citations by CoLab: 1  |  Abstract
Modern cases of global mobility cause legal ambiguities as to which conflict rules to apply to govern the applicable social security legislation. Relevant to this end is the question of whether the situation is governed by the lex loci laboris principle, the posting provision, or the rules on normal work in two or more Member States under EC Regulation 883/2004. Each of these three legal mechanisms must be distinguished from each other. First, this article proposes a structure for handling such distinctions. Secondly, it discusses how these distinctions are made. It is concluded that the posting provision has a wide scope of applicability whereas the scope of applicability of the rules on normal work in two or more Member States has been narrowed. On the basis of the legal description, this article analyses a catalogue of standard cases of modern mobility for which it is not clear whether the posting rules or the rules on normal work in two or more Member States apply. As the tendency drives towards temporary global mobility setups, a starting point is that the posting rule applies. The article concludes that the current EU rules on the applicable social security legislation have substantial flexibility for managing new cases of global mobility.
Book Review: Human Needs and the Welfare State by Bent Greve
Enqvist L.
Q2
SAGE
European Journal of Social Security 2024 citations by CoLab: 0
Book Review: The Justiciability of Economic, Social and Cultural Rights by Angelika Nussberger and David Landau
Baumann C.
Q2
SAGE
European Journal of Social Security 2024 citations by CoLab: 0
Popular support for a universal basic income – still sensitive to playing the immigration card?
Bay A., Hellevik T., Pedersen A.W.
Q2
SAGE
European Journal of Social Security 2024 citations by CoLab: 0  |  Abstract
This article aims to investigate the persuasive power of immigration on people's attitudes towards a universal basic income (UBI). We use a survey experiment in which respondents, after being asked about their immediate reaction to the idea of introducing an unconditional basic income, are confronted with a counterargument referring to immigration. The experiment was undertaken in November 2021 as part of the Norwegian Citizen Panel, a representative research-purpose internet panel, and replicates a similar survey experiment carried out among Norwegian voters in 2003. In the previous study, a large share of the respondents abandoned their initial position when exposed to counterarguments referring to immigration. The results of the present experiment confirm that immigration has substantial persuasive power as a counterargument among initial supporters of a UBI, also in the contemporary Norwegian context. Contrary to the previous study, we find a strong negative relationship between scepticism about immigration and the propensity to initially support a UBI proposal, but – as in the previous study – we find that having negative attitudes towards immigration is strongly associated with a tendency to abandon an initially supportive stance. Our findings give support to the core of the so-called ‘progressive's dilemma’: that immigration may erode support for ambitious welfare policies, particularly among traditionally pro-welfare state segments of the electorate.
Book Review: The Quantified Worker. Law and Technology in the Modern Workplace by Ifeoma Ajunwa
Biasi M.
Q2
SAGE
European Journal of Social Security 2024 citations by CoLab: 0
Overview of Recent Cases Before the Court of Justice of the European Union (January–June 2024)
Melin P., Parthenopoulos N.
Q2
SAGE
European Journal of Social Security 2024 citations by CoLab: 0
Overview of Recent Cases Before the European Court of Human Rights and the European Committee of Social Rights (January–June 2024)
De Becker E.
Q2
SAGE
European Journal of Social Security 2024 citations by CoLab: 0  |  Abstract
This case law report (January-June 2024) discusses six cases before the European Court of Human Rights (hereinafter: ECtHR) and one case before the European Committee of Social Rights (hereinafter: ECSR). 1 The first case ( O.R. v. Greece) concerned the lack of protection of an unaccompanied minor seeking international protection by the Greek government, in violation of the prohibition of torture in Article 3 ECHR. The second and fourth cases concerned possible violations of the right to a fair trial under Article 6 ECHR ( Bernotas v. Lithuania and Đurić v. Serbia), the applicant complained about the unfairness of the administrative and judicial review procedures. The third case, Shylina v. Ukraine, concerned the question of whether the obligation for a payment of social security benefits to a specific bank account at the Ukrainian State Bank violated the right to property under Article 1 Additional Protocol ECHR (hereinafter: AP ECHR). The case of Diaconeasa v. Romania concerned the withdrawal of support for a physically disabled person. The last case before the ECtHR that will be discussed in this case law report is B.T. v. Russia. In this case, the Court had to review the difference in treatment between men and women with regard to parental leave for police officers in the light of the prohibition of discrimination under Article 14 ECHR. This case law report only discusses one case before the ECSR. In collective complaint 187/2019, the ECSR had to review the reduction of survivor's benefits in Italy in the event of cumulation with other income with several provisions of the European Social Charter.
The rights to social security and social assistance in the European Social Charter: Towards a positive content…but what sort of content?
Gilman J.
Q2
SAGE
European Journal of Social Security 2024 citations by CoLab: 0  |  Abstract
The rights to social security and social assistance are protected by the European Social Charter and its quasi-judicial body, the European Committee of Social Rights. Less is known about the precise content of these rights. Following a decision, published on 15 February 2023, on a collective complaint lodged by the Finnish Society of Social Rights, an NGO, this paper proposes to critically question the positive content given by the Committee to these rights, when it attaches – and even assimilates – certain legal requirements to one specific social indicator, the poverty threshold, defined restrictively.
Reaching the European 2030 poverty target: The imperative to balance the EU social agenda
Akarçeşme S., Aranguiz A., Lemmens A., Cantillon B.
Q2
SAGE
European Journal of Social Security 2024 citations by CoLab: 0  |  Abstract
Reaching the three targets of the European Pillar of Social Rights (EPSR) Action Plan is the litmus test for effective EPSR implementation. While the EPSR puts forward a prima facie balance between employment, equal opportunities and social protection, two important questions arise: a) whether and to what extent the resources available at EU level are sufficiently balanced across the different dimensions of the EPSR; and b) which implications this may have for achieving the 2030 poverty target. Analysing the three domains of the EPSR, its Action Plan and the wider EU legal framework of the principles contained in the EPSR, the paper argues that abundant EU resources are available for the areas of equality and employment, but fewer for social inclusion. The empirical evidence on poverty trends over the past decades, however, points to important successes in terms of employment and (gender) equality, but not with respect to social inclusion: a significant increase in employment and defeminisation of poverty have been accompanied by greater precarity for low-skilled men and women. Particularly striking is the rise in the risk of poverty among jobless households, linked with the weakening of the poverty reduction capacity of social protection for this group. Meeting the European social inclusion targets will thus require policies that duly focus on strengthening the framework for social inclusion and social protection.
Book Review: Research Handbook on European Social Security Law by Frans Pennings and Gijsbert Vonk
Geraldo M.
Q2
SAGE
European Journal of Social Security 2024 citations by CoLab: 0
Book Review: Social dialogue in the gig economy: A comparative empirical analysis by JM Bonvin, N Cianferoni, M Mexi
Abhijeet
Q2
SAGE
European Journal of Social Security 2024 citations by CoLab: 0

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