JusGov researcher Teresa Coelho Moreira took part, on 6 and 7 November, in the XXVIII National Labour Law Congress, held at the Altis Hotel in Lisbon. In addition to serving on the Honorary Committee, she acted as co-organiser and as one of the event’s Scientific Coordinators, helping to shape the strategic and intellectual direction of a programme marked by areas of profound reconfiguration within labour law.
Since its inception in 1997, the Congress has been regarded as the foremost annual forum for reflection on labour law in Portugal. This year’s edition brought together jurists, judges, academics, lawyers and human-resources professionals to examine the far-reaching reform of the Labour Code approved by the XXV Constitutional Government. Discussions focused on proposed amendments to 89 provisions—around 16% of the entire Code—and on the broader effort to recalibrate the legal framework in response to the challenges posed by the economy 4.0, digital transformation, artificial intelligence and new forms of work. The Congress’s longstanding history, originally established under the auspices of the Presidency of the Portuguese Republic, continues to lend it a distinctive role within Portugals labour-law landscape.
Teresa Coelho Moreira’s participation attests to the steady diligence of the JusGov community at the leading edge of contemporary juridical reflection, contributing to the vitalisation of academic and professional networks that seek, in a moment of structural transfiguration, to articulate a Labour Law attentive to emerging social fragilities and committed to balanced and innovative normative solutions.
JusGov researcher Teresa Coelho Moreira took part, on 6 and 7 November, in the XXVIII National Labour Law Congress, held at the Altis Hotel in Lisbon. In addition to serving on the Honorary Committee, she acted as co-organiser and as one of the event’s Scientific Coordinators, helping to shape the strategic and intellectual direction of a programme marked by areas of profound reconfiguration within labour law.
Since its inception in 1997, the Congress has been regarded as the foremost annual forum for reflection on labour law in Portugal. This year’s edition brought together jurists, judges, academics, lawyers and human-resources professionals to examine the far-reaching reform of the Labour Code approved by the XXV Constitutional Government. Discussions focused on proposed amendments to 89 provisions—around 16% of the entire Code—and on the broader effort to recalibrate the legal framework in response to the challenges posed by the economy 4.0, digital transformation, artificial intelligence and new forms of work. The Congress’s longstanding history, originally established under the auspices of the Presidency of the Portuguese Republic, continues to lend it a distinctive role within Portugals labour-law landscape.
Teresa Coelho Moreira’s participation attests to the steady diligence of the JusGov community at the leading edge of contemporary juridical reflection, contributing to the vitalisation of academic and professional networks that seek, in a moment of structural transfiguration, to articulate a Labour Law attentive to emerging social fragilities and committed to balanced and innovative normative solutions.
