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Telework and Social Change: How Technology Is Reshaping the Boundaries between Home and Work
 
 
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Telework and Social Change: How Technology Is Reshaping the Boundaries between Home and Work [Hardcover]

Nicole B. Ellison (Author)

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Book Description

November 30, 2004 0275978001 978-0275978006

As technology comes to permeate every aspect of work, it liberates organizations and their employees from the physical boundaries of the workplace, and yet amplifies many of the interpersonal and cultural challenges inherent to corporate life. Drawing from an in-depth study of two dynamic organizations, along with extensive research on technology and organizational behavior, Nicole Ellison explores the subtle and powerful ways that distance working influences management effectiveness, worker productivity, and such intangible elements as social cohesion and trust.

Featuring interviews with executives, managers, and employees, Telework and Social Change illuminates the ways in which access to always-on information and communications technologies-which allow people to work from virtually anywhere-influence their work styles, interactions with colleagues and supervisors, and the ways in which they define the boundaries between work and home. Offering insights for future research and practice, Telework and Social Change provides a multi-dimensional perspective on the evolving relationships among technology, geography, and the structural and cultural aspects of work in the digital age.


Editorial Reviews

Review

?[H]elpfully and clearly establishes the historical and theoretical background of telework and its usefulness as a method of work organization. For employers and policy-makers who view telework as an innovative tool to help reconcile work and family life, Ellison cogently identifies such issues as how it is used (whether a teleworker always works at home or does so periodically), trust between employer and worker, and the mental separation needed between work and personal life for teleworkers as essential factors requiring further reflection.?-International Labour Review

Book Description

Explores the subtle and powerful impacts of telework on corporate culture and home life.


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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Organizations and individuals are attracted to technology-enabled distributed work for a variety of reasons, including a challenging economic climate, the perceived need to lengthen the workday,1 globalization trends, and an increase in dual-career families. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
one teleworker, one support employee, telework researchers, social shaping perspective, distributed work environment, social influence model, organizational identification
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Help Desk, Culver City, United States, Dave Lee, Southern California, World Wide Web, Mail Boxes Etc, Cyberlane Commuter, Los Angeles
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