This paper, which is predicated on the view that reductions in work-time are generally desirable, explores the working hours of managers and professionals in UK industry. Managers and professionals are often grouped together in empirical and theoretical work, e.g. in the literature on the professional-managerial class, and Goldthorpe's 'Service Class'. Nevertheless, there are differences: professionals, historically, are autonomous workers; the role of managers, in contrast, is to extract work from others on behalf of the organisation. Using data collected from the 2005 Labour Force Survey we establish there are statistically significant empirical differences between managers and professionals; one of these differences is in attitudes to wo...
This dissertation offers several insights on the preferences for weekly working hours. In the public...
Studies of workers engaged in patterns of long working hours increasingly draw on working-time prefe...
This study seeks explanations for working time preferences, using cross-sectional multinomial logits...
This paper, which is predicated on the view that reductions in work-time are generally desirable, ex...
This paper, which is predicated on the view that reductions in work-time are generally desirable, ex...
This article explores the erosion of the standard working-time model associated with ...
This thesis examines why working time preferences differ between workers and nations, and explains t...
This article uses the British Workplace Employee Relations Survey 1998 dataset to evaluate the impor...
This paper investigates constraints on desired hours of work using information on hours preferences ...
This paper uses survey data to explore employee satisfaction with working time arrangements within a...
We use British panel data to investigate whether or not subjective data on desired labour supply pro...
This dissertation offers several insights on the preferences for weekly working hours. In the public...
The aim of this book is to give, within due limits, an idea of matters related to the "hot" topic of...
International audienceCollective bargaining between employers and trade unions has profoundly change...
Original article can be found at: http://www.emeraldinsight.com/ Copyright Emerald Group Publishing ...
This dissertation offers several insights on the preferences for weekly working hours. In the public...
Studies of workers engaged in patterns of long working hours increasingly draw on working-time prefe...
This study seeks explanations for working time preferences, using cross-sectional multinomial logits...
This paper, which is predicated on the view that reductions in work-time are generally desirable, ex...
This paper, which is predicated on the view that reductions in work-time are generally desirable, ex...
This article explores the erosion of the standard working-time model associated with ...
This thesis examines why working time preferences differ between workers and nations, and explains t...
This article uses the British Workplace Employee Relations Survey 1998 dataset to evaluate the impor...
This paper investigates constraints on desired hours of work using information on hours preferences ...
This paper uses survey data to explore employee satisfaction with working time arrangements within a...
We use British panel data to investigate whether or not subjective data on desired labour supply pro...
This dissertation offers several insights on the preferences for weekly working hours. In the public...
The aim of this book is to give, within due limits, an idea of matters related to the "hot" topic of...
International audienceCollective bargaining between employers and trade unions has profoundly change...
Original article can be found at: http://www.emeraldinsight.com/ Copyright Emerald Group Publishing ...
This dissertation offers several insights on the preferences for weekly working hours. In the public...
Studies of workers engaged in patterns of long working hours increasingly draw on working-time prefe...
This study seeks explanations for working time preferences, using cross-sectional multinomial logits...