© 2015 London School of Economics and Political Science. The paper was stimulated by the relative absence of the working class from work-life debates. The common conclusion from work-life studies is that work-life imbalance is largely a middle-class problem. It is argued here that this classed assertion is a direct outcome of a particular and narrow interpretation of work-life imbalance in which time is seen to be the major cause of difficulty. Labour market time, and too much of it, dominates the conceptualization of work-life and its measurement too. This heavy focus on too much labour market time has rendered largely invisible from dominant work-life discourses the types of imbalance that are more likely to impact the working class. The ...
Do “Anglo-Saxon” management practices generate higher productivity only at the expense of lousy work...
Increasing incidence of paid work in Australia and many other countries is often seen as severely co...
The paper asks ‘Where are we’ in the study of work-life balance within IR and ‘where to next’ if we ...
The paper was stimulated by the question of class in work-life debates. The common conclusion from w...
This chapter provides an overview of the relative roles played by time and money in debates around w...
The economic crisis that led to recession in the UK in 2008–9 impacted in multiple ways on work and ...
In the vast literature on work-life balance one question remains seriously under-elaborated: Why now...
During the second half of 20th century, with work demands increasingly encroaching on family and per...
During the second half of 20th century, with work demands increasingly encroaching on family and per...
Recent debates on time-use suggest that there is an inverse relationship between time poverty and in...
In the study of work time, a wealth of influential ideas have emerged about the potentially damaging...
Abstract Recent debates on time-use suggest that there is an inverse relationship between time pover...
In the last six decades, work life and family life spheres of employees have undergone various chang...
The purpose of this editorial is to provide an overview of the wider debates concerning the evolutio...
YesThis article focuses on the work-life ‘balance’ challenges of those who work in organisations tha...
Do “Anglo-Saxon” management practices generate higher productivity only at the expense of lousy work...
Increasing incidence of paid work in Australia and many other countries is often seen as severely co...
The paper asks ‘Where are we’ in the study of work-life balance within IR and ‘where to next’ if we ...
The paper was stimulated by the question of class in work-life debates. The common conclusion from w...
This chapter provides an overview of the relative roles played by time and money in debates around w...
The economic crisis that led to recession in the UK in 2008–9 impacted in multiple ways on work and ...
In the vast literature on work-life balance one question remains seriously under-elaborated: Why now...
During the second half of 20th century, with work demands increasingly encroaching on family and per...
During the second half of 20th century, with work demands increasingly encroaching on family and per...
Recent debates on time-use suggest that there is an inverse relationship between time poverty and in...
In the study of work time, a wealth of influential ideas have emerged about the potentially damaging...
Abstract Recent debates on time-use suggest that there is an inverse relationship between time pover...
In the last six decades, work life and family life spheres of employees have undergone various chang...
The purpose of this editorial is to provide an overview of the wider debates concerning the evolutio...
YesThis article focuses on the work-life ‘balance’ challenges of those who work in organisations tha...
Do “Anglo-Saxon” management practices generate higher productivity only at the expense of lousy work...
Increasing incidence of paid work in Australia and many other countries is often seen as severely co...
The paper asks ‘Where are we’ in the study of work-life balance within IR and ‘where to next’ if we ...