This article draws upon two different ethnographic studies – one based in Sweden, the other in the United Kingdom – to explore how private security officers working in an ambiguous and stigmatized industry construct and repair their self-esteem. While the concept of ‘dirty work’ (Hughes 1951) has been applied to public police officers, an examination of private security officers as dirty workers remains undeveloped. Along with describing instances of taint designation and management, we find that the occupational culture of security officers enhances self-esteem by infusing security work with a sense of purpose. As members of a tainted occupation, security officers employ a range of strategies to deflect scorn and reframe their work as impo...
The increasing demand for security services did not only impact the private security service industr...
Behaviour of certain members of a profession can ‘taint’ other workers. In this qualitative study, w...
The effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on essential service workers has given rise to their newfound “...
This article draws upon two different ethnographic studies � one based in Sweden, the other in the...
Dirty work is defined by Hughes (1958) as tasks that are \u201cphysically, socially, or morally\u201...
This thesis was submitted for the award of Doctor of Philosophy and was awarded by Brunel University...
Organisation studies has paid little attention to the contemporary private security industry, despit...
This article explores the phenomenon of scandals as they unfold in the private security industry. We...
This conceptual article develops the discussion on 'dirty work' from the occupational level of analy...
This conceptual article develops the discussion on 'dirty work' from the occupational level of analy...
Recent years have seen an increasing privatization of the security sector, leading to an intermingli...
Purpose: The public fascination for private investigators has led to an abundance of imagery in popu...
E.C. Hughes (1958) defines dirty work as work perceived as physically, socially, or morally tainte...
In this study, we develop the concept of dirty work by identifying new ways in which it is coped wit...
This article considers the processes through which some police officers with mental ill-health exper...
The increasing demand for security services did not only impact the private security service industr...
Behaviour of certain members of a profession can ‘taint’ other workers. In this qualitative study, w...
The effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on essential service workers has given rise to their newfound “...
This article draws upon two different ethnographic studies � one based in Sweden, the other in the...
Dirty work is defined by Hughes (1958) as tasks that are \u201cphysically, socially, or morally\u201...
This thesis was submitted for the award of Doctor of Philosophy and was awarded by Brunel University...
Organisation studies has paid little attention to the contemporary private security industry, despit...
This article explores the phenomenon of scandals as they unfold in the private security industry. We...
This conceptual article develops the discussion on 'dirty work' from the occupational level of analy...
This conceptual article develops the discussion on 'dirty work' from the occupational level of analy...
Recent years have seen an increasing privatization of the security sector, leading to an intermingli...
Purpose: The public fascination for private investigators has led to an abundance of imagery in popu...
E.C. Hughes (1958) defines dirty work as work perceived as physically, socially, or morally tainte...
In this study, we develop the concept of dirty work by identifying new ways in which it is coped wit...
This article considers the processes through which some police officers with mental ill-health exper...
The increasing demand for security services did not only impact the private security service industr...
Behaviour of certain members of a profession can ‘taint’ other workers. In this qualitative study, w...
The effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on essential service workers has given rise to their newfound “...