Empty Labor, Roland Paulsen
Empty Labor, Roland Paulsen
List: $19.99 | Sale: $13.99
Club: $9.99

Empty Labor
Idleness And Workplace Resistance

Author: Roland Paulsen

Narrator: Liam Gerrard

Unabridged: 8 hr 2 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Ascent Audio

Published: 12/10/2019


Synopsis

While most people work ever-longer hours, international statistics suggest that the average time spent on non-work activities per employee is around two hours a day. How is this possible, and what are the reasons behind employees withdrawing from work? In this thought-provoking book, Roland Paulsen examines organizational misbehavior, specifically the phenomenon of "empty labor," defined as the time during which employees engage in private activities during the working day. This study explores a variety of explanations, from under-employment to workplace resistance. Building on a rich selection of interview material and extensive empirical research, it uses both qualitative and quantitative data to present a concrete analysis of the different ways empty labor unfolds in the modern workplace. This book offers new perspectives on subjectivity, rationality, and work simulation and will be of particular interest to academic researchers and graduate students in organizational sociology, organization studies, and human resource management.

Reviews

By Martin Langfield Work can be seen as a blessing or a curse. In his book “Empty Labor: Idleness and Workplace Resistance,” Swedish sociologist Roland Paulsen examines people who take mostly the latter view, asking how and why they shirk, and whether it’s always a bad thing. His study of idleness on......more

A very good analysis of the so-called "organization misbehavior" that hasn't been recognized as a mainstream topic as yet, but it has a major impact on the workplace and must be mandatory for all HR managers and people managers and leaders......more

Goodreads review by Joseph

Fascinating book, and surprisingly readable and quotable, by the standards of academic sociology. My complaints are: 1. I think the methodological chapter should have come between the theoretical chapters and the empirical chapters, rather than being relegated to an appendix. 2. The empirical chapters......more