Job Insecurity and Work Intensification

Front Cover
Brendan Burchell, David Ladipo, Frank Wilkinson
Psychology Press, 2002 - Business & Economics - 227 pages

Based on findings of the recently published Joseph Rowntree Report, this book provides an up-to-the-minute review of current research on flexibility, job insecurity and work intensification. It examines the impact of these developments on individuals, their families, the workplace and the long-term health of the British economy, as well as an analysis of the impact across a wide range of OECD countries including the United States, France, Germany, Sweden and Japan. Key questions addressed include:

* How are jobs more insecure?
* Does just-in-time labour mean more flexible contracts or more flexible workers?
* Does job insecurity entail a 'new flexible morality'?
* How does workplace stress affect individual health and family relationships?

Timely and thought-provoking, it is essential reading for all those involved in the fields of employment relations, HRM and the sociology of work.

 

Contents

List of illustrations
3
More pressure less protection
15
Flexibility and the reorganisation of work
49
The prevalence and redistribution of job insecurity
61
Disappearing pathways and the struggle for a fair days
77
the effects
92
The intensification of everyday life
112
The organisational costs of job insecurity and work
137
What can governments do?
172
Appendices
185
what can managers
203
References
206
Index
222
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases