The paper evaluates the centrality of work to employees in two growing employment sectors, call-centres and software development. It then examines evidence for extensions of work into household and family life in these two sectors. Extensions are identified as tangible, such as unpaid overtime, or intangible, represented by incursions imported from work, such as exhaustion and stress. The study finds that organizational pressures, combined with lack of work centrality, result in work intruding into non-work areas of employee lives, though intrusions manifest themselves in different ways according to type of work, levels of worker autonomy and organizational support. Copyright Blackwell Publishing Ltd/London School of Economics 2003..
There is a strong and ever growing interest in the conceptual relationship between work and family d...
Every organisation is concerned about the employee’s satisfaction and productivity and work life bal...
Call centres are a source of job growth in many parts of the world. Jobs in call centres are a manif...
The paper evaluates the centrality of work to employees in two growing employment sectors, call-cent...
This article examines the impact of employer flexibility to work-life issues and negative spillover ...
Recent speculation about the impact on family life of contemporary patterns of work has prompted con...
The study explores work-life balance and organisational commitment of employees working in American ...
This article reports on a symposium presented in EAWOP, 2009 that examined work-life balance issues ...
[Abstract]: Call centres have emerged as an organisational phenomenon within a relatively short spac...
In the last six decades, work life and family life spheres of employees have undergone various chang...
This exploratory research study centers on the work-life of software industry professionals in Sri L...
In the last six decades, work life and family life spheres of employees have undergone various chang...
The paper begins by examining what a more sustainable work life would look like for employees and co...
Work-life balance may not be of organisational importance as other areas in the current economic rec...
The pressure of increasingly demanding work culture in our country is perhaps the biggest and most p...
There is a strong and ever growing interest in the conceptual relationship between work and family d...
Every organisation is concerned about the employee’s satisfaction and productivity and work life bal...
Call centres are a source of job growth in many parts of the world. Jobs in call centres are a manif...
The paper evaluates the centrality of work to employees in two growing employment sectors, call-cent...
This article examines the impact of employer flexibility to work-life issues and negative spillover ...
Recent speculation about the impact on family life of contemporary patterns of work has prompted con...
The study explores work-life balance and organisational commitment of employees working in American ...
This article reports on a symposium presented in EAWOP, 2009 that examined work-life balance issues ...
[Abstract]: Call centres have emerged as an organisational phenomenon within a relatively short spac...
In the last six decades, work life and family life spheres of employees have undergone various chang...
This exploratory research study centers on the work-life of software industry professionals in Sri L...
In the last six decades, work life and family life spheres of employees have undergone various chang...
The paper begins by examining what a more sustainable work life would look like for employees and co...
Work-life balance may not be of organisational importance as other areas in the current economic rec...
The pressure of increasingly demanding work culture in our country is perhaps the biggest and most p...
There is a strong and ever growing interest in the conceptual relationship between work and family d...
Every organisation is concerned about the employee’s satisfaction and productivity and work life bal...
Call centres are a source of job growth in many parts of the world. Jobs in call centres are a manif...