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Book Review: Tiziano Bonini and Emiliano Treré, Algorithms of Resistance: The Everyday Fight Against Platform Power Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-11-16 Craig Gent
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Book Review: Pablo Pérez-Ahumada, Building Power to Shape Labor Policy: Unions, Employee Associations, and Reform in Neoliberal Chile Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-11-16 Daina Bellido de Luna
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(Doing) Time Is Money: Confinement, Prison Work and the Reproduction of Carceral Capitalism Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-11-16 Jenna Pandeli, Richard Longman
This article examines how prison work functions as a site where neoliberal and carceral capitalist logics are reproduced across individual, organisational and societal levels. Drawing on ethnographic research conducted in a private UK prison, we argue that confinement exacerbates prisoners’ obsession with money and predatory entrepreneurialism, reflecting and reinforcing the broader dynamics of carceral
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Book Review: Sarah Waters, Suicide Voices: Labour Trauma in France Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-11-16 William Fleming
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Exploring Informal Work: Gaining Legitimation through Nudging Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-11-13 Danny Buckley, Natalia Vershinina, Peter Rodgers
This article develops a micro-level understanding of informal work (IW) by exploring the legitimising factors which business owners exercise to provide the rationale for engaging in IW. Using the lens of nudge theory, originating from behavioural economics, we show how IW becomes legitimised through nudging. Empirically, we explore the lived experience of service sector business owners who engage in
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Book Review: Irene Sotiropoulou, Machines Against Measures Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-11-09 Konstantinos Kerasovitis
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Men at Work: How Are Masculinities Constituted and Performed in Work and Employment Settings? Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-11-09 Andreas Giazitzoglu
This collection addresses the question: how are masculinities constituted and performed in work and employment settings? Work, Employment and Society has published many studies which show people performing, engaging and resisting constitutions of masculinities in employment settings. This collection brings 11 of these publications together to show how and why masculinities – as culturally constructed
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Supersizing the Impact of Unions in Downsizing Processes: A Configurational Approach Based on 19 Cases in France Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-10-25 Vincent Pasquier, Rémi Bourguignon, Géraldine Schmidt
This article explores how unions can influence employer decisions to downsize – a longstanding question that has been addressed through three waves of research. Although the literature has successively identified three types of factors that influence managerial decisions to downsize, it has not fully addressed the interactions of these factors, leading to inconsistencies. This article builds on and
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Playing with Space to Deal with the Contradictions of Customer Sovereignty: An Ethnography of Service Workers’ Spatial Tactics in Train Stations Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-10-19 Albane Grandazzi, Oriane Sitte de Longueval, Jean-Baptiste Suquet
While the existing literature on service work allows us to understand how customer sovereignty policies constrain service work by transforming servicescapes, we need a more agential approach to how service workers use space as a resource to deal with the tensions resulting from the promotion of customer sovereignty. This article draws on de Certeau’s thinking to fill this gap by looking at how workers
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Book Review: Renyi Hong, Passionate Work: Endurance after the Good Life Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-09-27 Samia Rahman
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The Discursive Power of Trade Union Leadership: Framing Identity Fields for Public Persuasion Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-09-27 Kathryn A Boyle
This article explores the role of subjective agency and politicised union leadership in exercising societal (discursive) power through a frame and rhetorical analysis of the writings, speeches and media interviews of Mick Lynch, General Secretary of the National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers (UK). Findings demonstrate Lynch engaged in a dynamic process of framing identity fields to
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Crossers in a Segmented Labour Market: Occupational Advancement and Wage Changes from Semi-Skilled and Unskilled Jobs Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-09-25 Philip Wotschack, Claire Samtleben
How the upward mobility chances of workers in unskilled or semi-skilled jobs are shaped by influences at the organisational and sectoral level remains an open question. This article aims to close this research gap by examining the role of internal labour market characteristics in the promotion prospects and wage increases of workers in semi-skilled and unskilled positions. The hypotheses are derived
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Producing ‘The Right Candidate’: The Social Embeddedness of Labour Market Intermediaries for Migrant Workers in the Belgian Construction Sector Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-09-19 Simon Wuidar, Ludovic Bakebek, William Monteith
Structural labour shortages have increased demand for skilled and documented migrant workers in Western European labour markets. In response, private recruitment agencies are playing a more significant role in the identification, placement and integration of migrant workers. While the literature on labour intermediation practices has largely focused on the commercial and contractual work of matching
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Book Review: Penny Dick, Rethinking Gender Inequalities in Organizations Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-09-14 Charlotte Gascoigne
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Navigating the Labour Market: Women Job Seekers’ Mobilisation of a Postfeminist Sensibility Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-08-27 Ruth Abrams, Deborah Brewis, Miguel Imas
Job seeking is a crucial yet overlooked process through which people navigate the world of work. Yet there remains limited qualitative research examining the complex and nuanced experiences of job seekers in a contemporary labour market. This article explores 38 interviews with job-seeking women in England, all of whom were interviewed over a six-month period. Using a postfeminist sensibility, findings
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Diverging Entrepreneurial Paths of Survivalist Truckers: Migrants’ Ongoing Agency in US Trucking Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-08-15 Görkem Dağdelen
This article explores the formation of migrant agency by scrutinizing the decision-making processes of owner-operator truckers. Drawing on qualitative data collected among male migrants from Turkey in the US, the main finding is that migrant truckers, by making various decisions at the turning points of their career, choose one of three trucking segments and decide the number of trucks that they own
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Informal Cultures of Resistance and Worker Mobilization: The Case of Migrant Workers in the Italian Logistics Sector Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-08-15 Gabriella Cioce, Davide Però, Marek Korczynski
In the context of the rising power of capital over labour, research on labour mobilization is important. From the research literature, we know that labour mobilizations might be initiated by trade unions or via workers’ self-organization. Yet, we know little about the cultural and social processes through which individual workers come to self-organize in the first place. To address this gap, we present
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Bearing Psychic Weight and Accountability: Navigating Racism and Microaggressions in Creative Work Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-08-01 Kim de Laat, Alanna Stuart
This article examines how Indigenous, Black, and people of colour (IBPOC) music industry workers navigate moments of racism and microaggressions. Through interviews with musical artists and industry workers ( N = 55), the article identifies two strategies for navigating situational acts of racism: alleviation and confrontation. Those choosing to alleviate reactions to racism express a psychic weight
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Eddie Webster, 29/03/1942 – 05/03/2024 Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-07-31 Michael Brookes
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Structural Labour Market Change and Gender Inequality in Earnings Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-07-28 Anna Matysiak, Wojciech Hardy, Lucas van der Velde
Research from the US argues that women will benefit from a structural labour market change as the importance of social tasks increases and that of manual tasks declines. This article contributes to this discussion in three ways: (a) by extending the standard framework of task content of occupations in order to account for the gender perspective; (b) by developing measures of occupational task content
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Old Habits Die Hard? The Role of Trade Union Identity and Framing Processes in Shaping Strategy Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-07-27 Genevieve Coderre-LaPalme
This article investigates whether differences in trade union identity can explain local and national variations in union strategy. To do so, it compares the divergent responses of unions to healthcare privatisation initiatives across six cases in England and France. It brings together the often disparate literatures on union identity, strategy and mobilisation and presents a new conceptual model to
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Working Time Mismatch and Employee Subjective Well-being across Institutional Contexts: A Job Quality Perspective Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-06-25 Wanying Ling, Senhu Wang, Zhuofei Lu
Despite the well-documented negative impact of working time mismatch on employee subjective well-being, little is known about the extent to which this association can be explained by job quality and how these patterns may differ across institutional contexts. Utilizing panel data from the UK and cross-country data from Europe, the decomposition analyses show that for underemployment, more than half
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Is Any Job Better Than No Job? Utilising Jahoda’s Latent Deprivation Theory to Reconceptualise Underemployment Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-06-25 Vanessa Beck, Tracey Warren, Clare Lyonette
Underemployment is a widely discussed but complex concept. This article progresses discussions and provides a new sociological conceptualisation. It builds on a classic theory of unemployment, Jahoda et al.’s ‘latent deprivation theory’ (LDT), that identified five ‘latent functions’ provided by jobs, besides a wage: time structure, social relations, sense of purpose/achievement, personal identity and
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Integrating Collective Voice within Job Demands–Resources Theory Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-05-27 Josef Ringqvist
Drawing on insights from the sociology of work, this article contributes to job demands–resources (JD-R) theory by arguing that collective employee voice should be considered within the framework as an antecedent of job demands and job resources. An empirical test is offered to substantiate the theoretical argument, hypothesizing that collective voice – measured as trade union influence at the workplace
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Why Do So Many People Not Vote? Correlates of Participation in Trade Union Strike Ballots Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-05-27 Ioulia Bessa, Andy Hodder, John Kelly
The Trade Union Act (2016) stipulates that in order for a strike to be lawful it must now achieve a turnout of ‘at least 50 per cent’ in addition to a majority vote for strike action in the UK. We know remarkably little about the correlates of voting and even less about the decision to vote or abstain in union strike ballots. We address this gap, drawing from a large-scale survey of Public and Commercial
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Working like Machines: Technological Upgrading and Labour in the Dutch Agri-food Chain Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-05-07 Karin Astrid Siegmann, Petar Ivošević, Oane Visser
This article engages with the role of technological upgrading for work in agriculture, a sector commonly disregarded in debates about the future of work. Foregrounding migrant work in Dutch horticulture, it explores how technological innovation is connected to the scope and security of employment. Besides, it proposes a heuristic that connects workers’ experience to sectoral dynamics and the wider
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Extreme Lockdowns and the Gendered Informalization of Employment: Evidence from the Philippines Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-04-30 Vincent Jerald Ramos
The adverse effects of COVID-19 on labour market outcomes are amplified by and partly attributable to the imposition of extreme mobility restrictions. While gendered disparities in job losses and reduction in working hours are demonstrated in the literature, is an informalization of employment observed, and is this phenomenon likewise gendered? This article analyses the Philippines, a country that
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Medicalisation of Unemployment: An Analysis of Sick Leave for the Unemployed in Germany Using a Three-Level Model Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-04-29 Philipp Linden, Nadine Reibling
The study investigates whether sick leave for the unemployed is used to address problems of labour market integration – a process that can theoretically be conceptualised as the medicalisation of unemployment. Estimating a multilevel logistic regression model on a sample of N = 20,196 individuals from the German panel study Labour Market and Social Security (PASS) reveals that, on average, 18% of the
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Marketisation and the Public Good: A Typology of Responses among Museum Professionals Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-04-29 Jeremy Aroles, Kevin Morrell
Across Western democracies, the public sector has undergone significant changes following successive waves of marketisation. Such changes find material expression in an organisation’s logic and associated vocabulary. While marketisation may be adopted, a growing body of research explains how it is often resisted as public sector professionals reject its logic and vocabulary. We contribute to this debate
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Characteristics or Returns: Understanding Gender Pay Inequality among College Graduates in the USA Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-04-29 Joanna Dressel, Paul Attewell, Liza Reisel, Kjersti Misje Østbakken
Explanations for the persistent pay disparity between similarly qualified men and women vary between women’s different and devalued work characteristics and specific processes that result in unequal wage returns to the same characteristics. This article investigates how the gender wage gap is affected by gender differences in detailed work activities among full-time, year-round, college-graduate workers
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Parental Exposure to Work Schedule Instability and Child Sleep Quality Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-04-29 Allison Logan, Daniel Schneider
Recent scholarship has documented the effects of unstable scheduling practices on worker health and well-being, but there has been less research examining the intergenerational consequences of work schedule instability. This study investigates the relationship between parental exposure to unstable and unpredictable work schedules and child sleep quality. We find evidence of significant and large associations
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Inequality Regimes in Coworking Spaces: How New Forms of Organising (Re)produce Inequalities Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-03-21 Lena Knappert, Boukje Cnossen, Renate Ortlieb
Coworking is a rapidly growing worldwide phenomenon. While the coworking movement emphasises equality and emancipation, there is little known about the extent to which coworking spaces as new forms of organising live up to this ideal. This study examines inequality in coworking spaces in the Netherlands, employing Acker’s framework of inequality regimes. The findings highlight coworking-specific components
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‘It’s One Rule for Them and One for Us’: Occupational Classification, Gender and Worktime Domestic Labour Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-03-21 Julie Monroe, Steve Vincent, Ana Lopes
In this article, we focus on gender and class to investigate worktime domestic labour. Methodologically, we extend a novel, comparative critical realist method in which occupation-based and gendered positions in productive and reproductive labour are foregrounded. By building theoretical connections between labour process conditions and collective rule-following practices, we illustrate how inequalities
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How do parents care together? Dyadic parental leave take-up strategies, wages and workplace characteristics Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-03-06 Marie Valentova
The article explores the association between within-household couples’ parental leave take-up strategies and parents’ earning capacity (hourly wages) and their workplace characteristics. The results, based on the social security register data from Luxembourg, reveal that a couple strategy where both partners take parental leave is more likely when the partners have equal earning capacity, when the
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‘A Good Death’: One Hospice Chaplain’s Approach to End-of-Life Care Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-03-06 Rachael N Pettigrew, Madison Cawdor
When doctors determine patients’ life expectancy to be six months or less, patients are considered palliative. Hospice offers care for the terminally ill patient’s body, mind and spirit. As part of the hospice team, chaplains support the spiritual needs of the patient and their family – a challenging and rewarding role. Dr Madison Cawdor shares his extensive experience as a United States-based hospice
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Turning Social Capital into Scientific Capital: Men’s Networking in Academia Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-03-06 Margaretha Järvinen, Nanna Mik-Meyer
Universities have changed in recent decades with the introduction of various performance measurement systems, including journal ranking lists. This Bourdieu-inspired article analyses three types of strategies used by male associate professors in response to journal lists: building social capital at conferences and during stays abroad; marketing of research papers to potential reviewers and journal
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Unions, technology and social class inequalities in the US, 1984–2019 Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-02-22 Saverio Minardi
Earnings inequality in the US has risen in recent decades, with social class inequalities being a central component of this trend. While technological change and de-unionisation are considered key contributors to increased earnings dispersion, their specific influence on inequalities between employees’ social classes has received limited attention. This study theoretically and empirically investigates
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How Institutional Logics Inform Emotional Labour: An Ethnography of Junior Doctors Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-02-09 Priyanka Vedi, Marek Korczynski, Simon Bishop
Sociological analysis of emotional labour can be aided by considering how institutional logics inform the performance of emotional labour. We consider the link between institutional logics and emotional labour by conducting an in-depth case study of junior doctors in a large UK hospital. We point to three key institutional logics – bureaucratic, consumerist and professional logics – and show how they
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Constructing Mobilities: The Reproduction of Posted Workers’ Disposability in the Construction Sector Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-01-30 Francesco Bagnardi, Devi Sacchetto, Francesca Alice Vianello
Posted work is often framed as a business model based on social dumping. Widespread regulatory evasion is imputed to regulation’s opacity, firms’ predatory practices and trade unions’ inability to organise posted workers. Isolation and precariousness channel posted workers’ agency into individualised reworking or exit strategies. These perspectives, however insightful, focus either on formal regulations
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Live Performers’ Experiences of Precarity and Recognition during COVID-19 and Beyond Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-01-25 Philip Hancock, Melissa Tyler
COVID-19 devastated the ability of self-employed and freelance live performers working in the UK’s live entertainment industries to sustain a living in an already precarious sector of employment. It also exposed the inadequacies of existing ways of conceptualising precarity in allowing a complete understanding of performers’ experiences of precarious employment, particularly during such a crisis. Combining
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The Impact of Welfare Conditionality on Experiences of Job Quality Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-01-12 Katy Jones, Sharon Wright, Lisa Scullion
This article contributes to emerging debates about how behavioural conditionality within welfare systems influences job quality. Drawing upon analysis of unique data from three waves of qualitative longitudinal interviews with 46 UK social security recipients (133 interviews), we establish that the impact of welfare conditionality is so substantial that it is no longer adequate to discuss job quality
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How Work Hour Variability Matters for Work-to-Family Conflict Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-01-09 Hyojin Cho, Susan J Lambert, Emily Ellis, Julia R Henly
Variable work hours are an understudied source of work-to-family conflict (WFC). We examine the relationships between the magnitude and direction of work hour variability and WFC and whether work hour control and schedule predictability moderate these relationships. We estimate a series of linear regressions using the 2016 US General Social Survey, examining women and men workers separately and together
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Relational Responsibilisation and Diversity Management in the 21st Century: The Case for Reframing Equality Regulation Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-01-09 Steve Vincent, Ana Lopes, Elina Meliou, Mustafa Özbilgin
This article critiques equality regulation within neoliberal policy regimes and suggests an alternative. We argue that, globally, neoliberal regimes exacerbate social divisions by individualising responsibilities for addressing inequalities. Consequentially, a new policy direction for equality regulation is required. Using the UK economy as an exemplar, we make the case for relational responsibilisation
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‘Divergent Work Ageing’ and Older Migrants’ (Un)extended Working Lives Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-01-08 Sajia Ferdous
This article theorises older ethnic minority women’s work attitudes and labour market behaviour from an intersectional cumulative perspective within the extended working lives contexts. Empirical evidence has been drawn from interviews with South Asian British Muslim women aged between 50 and 66 living in Greater Manchester, UK. The findings show that the cohort’s ageing process is asynchronous with
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'At Times it's Too Difficult, it is Too Traumatic, it's Too Much': The Emotion Work of Domestic Abuse Helpline Staff During Covid-19. Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2023-10-04 Chloe Maclean,Zara Brodie,Roxanne Hawkins,Jack Cameron McKinlay
During the Covid-19 lockdowns, domestic abuse helpline staff (DAHS) in the UK faced both a shift from working in an office to working-from-home and an increased demand for their services. This meant that during Covid-19, DAHS faced an increase in traumatic calls, and all within their own homes. This article explores the emotions work of DAHS to manage and work through their work-related emotions during
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Avoiding, Resisting and Enduring: A New Typology of Worker Responses to Workplace Violence Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2023-04-17 Ellen T Meiser, Eli R Wilson
Drawing on research on chefs and aspiring chefs in commercial kitchens, this article typologises workers’ strategic responses to violence and illustrates how these responses are shaped by occupatio...
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Sexual Orientation, Workplace Authority and Occupational Segregation: Evidence from Germany Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2023-03-31 Lisa de Vries, Stephanie Steinmetz
An extensive body of research has documented the relationship between sexual orientation and income, but only a few studies have examined the effects of sexual orientation on workplace authority. T...
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Unpromising Futures: Early-Career GPs’ Narrative Accounts of Meaningful Work during a Professional Workforce Crisis Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2023-03-27 Louise Laverty, Katherine Checkland, Sharon Spooner
Over the past few decades, the intensification and reorganisation of work have led to growing precarity, insecurity and uncertainty for employees, affecting even professionals tied to traditionally...
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The Equality Hurdle: Resolving the Welfare State Paradox Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2023-03-18 Erling Barth, Liza Reisel, Kjersti Misje Østbakken
This article revisits a central tenet of the welfare state paradox, also known as the inclusion-equality trade-off. Using large-scale survey data for 31 European countries and the United States, co...
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Trans People in the Workplace: Possibilities for Subverting Heteronormativity Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2023-03-15 David Watson, Angelo Benozzo, Roberta Fida
This article explores possible subversions of heteronormativity through transgender performativity in the workplace. Drawing on insights from Judith Butler we focus on how employees construct (un)i...
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Technological Change, Tasks and Class Inequality in Europe Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2023-03-07 Carlos J Gil-Hernández, Guillem Vidal, Sergio Torrejón Perez
Neo-Weberian occupational class schemas, rooted in industrial-age employment relations, are a standard socio-economic position measure in social stratification. Previous research highlighted Erikso...
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Making Markets Material: Enactments, Resistances, and Erasures of Materiality in the Graduate Labour Market Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2023-03-07 Olga Loza, Philip Roscoe
Scholarship on the graduate labour market, preoccupied by structure, agency, and power, has largely focused on the market’s discursive composition. It has not yet paid significant attention to the ...
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Choreographies of Care: A Dance of Human and Material Agency in Rehabilitation Work with Robots Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2023-03-05 Angelo Gasparre, Lia Tirabeni
This article seeks to advance the understanding of how human and material agency enmesh in human-robotic workplaces. By means of a qualitative study, the practical use of robots is investigated wit...
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Assisted Reproductive Technologies and Work, Employment and Society: Extending the Debate on Organisational Involvement in/Responsibilities around Fertility and Reproduction Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2023-02-27 Krystal Wilkinson, Clare Mumford, Michael Carroll
A relatively recent development in the field of work and employment is organisational provisions around employee fertility – notably policies and benefits related to assisted reproductive technolog...
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Matching Candidates to Culture: How Assessments of Organisational Fit Shape the Hiring Process Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2023-02-27 Gerbrand Tholen
Organisational fit represents a crucial criterion in the hiring process. This article aims to understand how employers and external recruitment consultants define and apply organisational fit in pr...
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Labour Market Engineers: Reconceptualising Labour Market Intermediaries with the Rise of the Gig Economy in the United States Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2023-02-22 Ashley Baber
Gig work – accessing job opportunities through an app – has brought renewed attention to precarious non-standard labour arrangements. Scholars have begun to consider the intermediary role that plat...
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Sustaining Solidarity through Social Media? Employee Social-Media Groups as an Emerging Platform for Collectivism in Pakistan Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2023-02-16 Syed Imran Saqib, Matthew M C Allen, Miguel Martínez Lucio, Maria Allen
Forging solidarity among seemingly privileged white-collar professionals has been seen as a challenging process. However, many banking employees in Pakistan feel marginalized and lack formal collec...
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The Role of Community Organisations in the Collective Mobilisation of Migrant Workers: The Importance of a ‘Community’-Oriented Perspective Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2023-02-02 Joyce Jiang, Marek Korczynski
In examining the collective mobilisation of migrant workers, scholars have explored the emergence of community organisations as alternative forms of worker representation. However, community unioni...
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Framing Unions and Nurses Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2023-02-02 Susan Cake
Union communication and framing are important for how union members, as well as how unions as organizations, are represented. In the context of declining union density and therefore fewer direct un...