‘I Can Just Do Work I'm Paid to Do’: Hybrid Work and Tertiary Labour Time Gains

IF 1.5 Q2 INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS & LABOR
Lila Skountridaki, Oliver Mallett
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This paper adopts a moral economy framework to analyse the unique and collective experience of remote work during the UK pandemic lockdowns. Through analysis of qualitative interviews with workers based at home during periods of lockdown, we explore how this offered workers a new opportunity to evaluate a particular type of work extensification experienced when working onsite. We found that workers gained clarity over ‘preparing-for-work’, commuting and other unpaid labour as unfairly burdening nonwork time and social goods like family, health and leisure. We expand on the idea of tertiary time to suggest that hybrid work, despite its potential drawbacks, is viewed by workers as a way to regain some control over this area of their lives. By examining this in terms of the concept of lay normativity, our analysis draws out the importance of personal needs and emotional connections. We identify how, during the pandemic's extreme circumstances, a new opportunity for evaluation emerged that facilitated the development of a new sentiment around tertiary time devoted to the commute and preparation for work.

“我可以只做拿工资的工作”:混合工作和第三次劳动时间收益
本文采用道德经济框架来分析英国大流行封锁期间远程工作的独特和集体经验。通过对封锁期间在家工作的工人进行定性访谈的分析,我们探讨了这如何为工人提供了一个新的机会来评估在现场工作时经历的特定类型的工作扩展。我们发现,工人们越来越清楚地认识到,“为工作做准备”、通勤和其他无偿劳动不公平地负担了非工作时间和家庭、健康和休闲等社会福利。我们扩展了第三次工作时间的概念,表明混合工作,尽管有潜在的缺点,被工人视为一种重新控制他们生活中这一领域的方式。通过从世俗规范性的概念来考察这一点,我们的分析得出了个人需求和情感联系的重要性。我们确定,在大流行的极端情况下,如何出现了新的评估机会,促进了对专门用于通勤和准备工作的高等教育时间的新情绪的发展。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS JOURNAL
INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS JOURNAL INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS & LABOR-
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
14.30%
发文量
33
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