Newstral
Article
Forbes on 2020-01-08 17:39
Finland’s Prime Minister’s Aspirational Goal Of A Six-Hour, Four-Day Workweek: Will This Ever Happen?
Related news
- The Truth Behind The 80-Hour Startup WorkweekForbes
- Proposed Washington State Law Would Create 32-Hour Workweekjdsupra.com
- South Korea ditches 69-hour workweek plan after youth revoltNew York Post
- Revisiting “The 4-Hour Workweek”The New Yorker
- One of China's richest men endorses controversial 12-hour, 6-day workweekCNN
- The 80-hour workweek doesn’t truly workThe Globe and Mail
- The case for a universal basic income, open borders, and a 15-hour workweekvox.com
- Should we rethink the 40-hour workweek?Merced Sun-Star
- France presents reform to 35-hour workweekThe Toledo Blade
- Now That Working From Home Has Proven Successful, Unilever Is Trying Out A Four-Day WorkweekForbes
- Finland’s grand AI experimentPolitico.eu
- Earth Hour doesn’t move the needle on Finland’s electricity gridAlaska Dispatch News
- T32-hour workweek bill reintroduced in Congress: Will it pass?thehill.com
- It's time to end the 40-hour workweekCNN
- 32-Hour Workweek? Not Just Yet, California Legislature Saysjdsupra.com
- What Would a 32-Hour Workweek Look Like?jdsupra.com
- Finland: Finland’s Sanna Marin concedes election defeatFinancial Times
- Finland’s parliament picks world’s youngest sitting premierseattletimes.com