Press release for WfH project

Posted on | March 25, 2010 | No Comments

This is the press release that went out today from the Sydney Uni media office. Thanks to Jackie Chowns for her work on this. Watch out for me on Sky news this afternoon (yes, you read that correctly!) :-)

The much-touted “work/life balance” is shaping up to be riddled with paradox with new research showing work-related email invading the homes and intimate leisure spaces of workers, causing stress, anxiety, an inability to switch off as well as the potential to damage family relationships.

Dr Melissa Gregg from the Department of Gender and Cultural Studies at the University of Sydney carried out a three-year study entitled “Working from home: New media technology, workplace culture and the changing nature of domesticity”.

The study was part of an Australian Postdoctoral Fellowship Project in which in-depth interviews were carried out with 26 information workers from large organisations over a three-year period.

“The study coincided with the rise of online culture over the past three years: specifically social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter. Many people consider these platforms to be purely leisure practices to be used in people’s time off.

“But for workers in a range of office jobs, it’s become part of the job. And largely this has happened without any discussion at the workplace about implications for workload.”

Many workers in the study responded that checking and sending emails from home did not constitute “work”. They would check email at night in bed, and as early as 6am before children woke, so that they could focus on ”real work” in office hours.

“This study was designed to pick up all that extra work that goes on outside the office, which is generally sold to us as this new freedom to be in touch with work when it suits us.”

“We found some surprising stories from people who said they were concerned that their children were addicted to the internet, but who were actually showing signs of addiction themselves. But these people didn’t see their use of computers as a problem because it was do with work.”

The study found that children using computers and other technology at home were affected by the workloads of parents who seemed too distracted or exhausted with work to interact with them, Gregg says.

Part-time workers were found to keep email accounts open on official non-work days to “keep things moving” and avoid “holding up” full-time workers. “This hidden labour in the home translates to a significant amount of unpaid work performed by women,” Dr Gregg says. “It’s another factor in the ongoing gender pay gap.”

Gregg says that many in the study reported increased signs of stress and anxiety.

“The evidence shows that most people think it is just their own individual failing that they can’t keep up both with the technology and the amount of communication they are having to deal with.

“Once you see this message across industries you know that it is a problem that has to be dealt with structurally, not by forcing workers to adopt individual solutions.”

(The results will be published in Work’s Intimacy, Polity Press, later this year)

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