Although technological proliferation is a reality in a 4IR world, and has immense potential to increase the efficiency and quality of work, it is accompanied by workplace practices that there is no benchmark for. These practices have the potential to unsettle traditional work routines, traditional work/non-work boundaries, and to disturb peoples’ work life balance irreparably. Against this backdrop, this paper explores the parameters of morally acceptable organisational practices in terms of usage and expectations of ICT’s. Through adopting a Critical scholarly stance, this paper dialectically investigates the nature of work and the importance people associate with it, the ways in which technology impacts work and peoples’ lives, and...
Originally technology was to end work and produce leisure, nowadays technology seems devoted to the ...
In recent years, understanding digital technology and trends in its transformation is crucial for co...
If nanotechnology lives up to its revolutionary promises, do we then need a ‘new ’ type of ethics to...
The economic and social consequences of technological change in capitalist societies have always bee...
In 1845, Karl Marx (1845, 571) formulated the 11th Feuerbach Thesis: “The philosophers have only int...
This paper explores the ambiguous impact of new information and communications technologies (ICTs) o...
The Weberian sense of work and life suggests that working is something around which the rest of life...
The Weberian sense of work and life suggests that working is something around which the rest of life...
Work is a central feature of everyday life, but what do we actually mean by 'work'? On the surface w...
Marx’s work on machines showed an initial clarity on where he believed technology sits in the means...
Digital technologies such as the mobile phone, the Internet, and personal computers gained widesprea...
Technology has an effect on how people live, and how they work. By looking at workplace contestation...
The digital labour debate has produced manifold insights into new forms of work emerging within digi...
International audienceThe ethical issues introduced by excessive uses of ubiquitous information tech...
International audienceThe ethical issues introduced by excessive uses of ubiquitous information tech...
Originally technology was to end work and produce leisure, nowadays technology seems devoted to the ...
In recent years, understanding digital technology and trends in its transformation is crucial for co...
If nanotechnology lives up to its revolutionary promises, do we then need a ‘new ’ type of ethics to...
The economic and social consequences of technological change in capitalist societies have always bee...
In 1845, Karl Marx (1845, 571) formulated the 11th Feuerbach Thesis: “The philosophers have only int...
This paper explores the ambiguous impact of new information and communications technologies (ICTs) o...
The Weberian sense of work and life suggests that working is something around which the rest of life...
The Weberian sense of work and life suggests that working is something around which the rest of life...
Work is a central feature of everyday life, but what do we actually mean by 'work'? On the surface w...
Marx’s work on machines showed an initial clarity on where he believed technology sits in the means...
Digital technologies such as the mobile phone, the Internet, and personal computers gained widesprea...
Technology has an effect on how people live, and how they work. By looking at workplace contestation...
The digital labour debate has produced manifold insights into new forms of work emerging within digi...
International audienceThe ethical issues introduced by excessive uses of ubiquitous information tech...
International audienceThe ethical issues introduced by excessive uses of ubiquitous information tech...
Originally technology was to end work and produce leisure, nowadays technology seems devoted to the ...
In recent years, understanding digital technology and trends in its transformation is crucial for co...
If nanotechnology lives up to its revolutionary promises, do we then need a ‘new ’ type of ethics to...