学术界的工作-非工作界限:一个问题化的回顾。

Open research Europe Pub Date : 2025-02-05 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.12688/openreseurope.18573.2
Jūratė Čingienė, Aleksandra Batuchina
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引用次数: 0

摘要

学术环境中工作与非工作之间的相互作用一直是广泛研究的主题,特别是在工作与生活平衡和工作与非工作冲突方面。然而,很多文献往往忽略了工作-非工作边界的具体动态。此外,虽然先前的研究已经探索了冲突与平衡的一般模式,但它并没有充分解决学者面临的独特压力,如高度自治,不规律的工作时间和竞争需求。这篇综述批判性地考察了学术工作的特定性质如何塑造工作与非工作之间的界限,推动了超越传统方法的对话。指导本综述的中心研究问题是:学术工作的各个方面如何塑造工作与非工作界限的模糊?通过问题化的方法,本综述依靠41篇文章来扩大和增强我们对学术界遇到的边界挑战的理解。研究结果显示,学术界工作与非工作界限模糊的原因是工作与生活需求超载、工作与家庭冲突、缺乏组织支持,再加上数字化和新自由主义实践。管理主义、职业主义和不稳定性加剧了这些界限的模糊,影响了学者的福祉和身份工作。通过解决这些差距,本综述提供了对学者如何在这些压力形成的复杂环境中构建、导航和协商边界的细致理解。这篇综述挑战了传统工作-非工作界面方法的局限性,倡导一种更加上下文敏感的经验视角。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Work-Nonwork boundaries in academia: A problematizing review.

The interplay between work and non-work in academic settings has been the subject of extensive research, particularly in relation to work-life balance and work-nonwork conflict. However, much of this literature has tended to overlook the specific dynamics of work-nonwork boundaries. Moreover, while prior research has explored general patterns of conflict and balance, it has not sufficiently addressed the unique pressures that academics face, such as high autonomy, irregular working hours, and competing demands. This review critically examines how the specific nature of academic work shapes the boundaries between work and non-work, advancing the conversation beyond traditional approaches. The central research question guiding this review is: How do the aspects of academic work shape the blurring of work-nonwork boundaries? Through a problematizing approach, this review relies on 41 articles to broaden and enhance our understanding of the boundary challenges academics encounter. Findings reveal that blurred work-nonwork boundaries in academia are driven by work-life demand overload, work-family conflicts, and a lack of organizational support, compounded by digitalisation and neoliberal practices. Heightened managerialism, careerism, and precarity exacerbate the blurring of these boundaries, affecting academics' well-being and identity work. By addressing these gaps, this review offers a nuanced understanding of how academics construct, navigate, and negotiate boundaries within a complex environment shaped by these pressures. The review challenges the limitations of conventional approaches to work-nonwork interface advocating for a more context-sensitive, experiential perspective.

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