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Books > Business & Economics > Business & management > Office & workplace > General
This book examines communicative practices in a circuit-board
manufacturing plant in California's Silicon Valley, where the
employees come from diverse ethnolinguistic backgrounds, their
activities involve the use of high-tech equipment and their
practices are shaped by, and sometimes contest, local and global
forces. Analyses of the data show that learning occurs optimally
when workers make strategic use of both their home languages and
English within an ecology of semiotic systems. The book
demonstrates the importance of accounting for multilingual
practices in studies of multimodality. Through detailed ethnography
it brings the reader to a better understanding of
learning-in-practice in work environments, where the complexities
and accelerated growth of new technologies along with a globalized
world produce new forms of multilingual and multimodal
communication.
We spend a lot of our time at work and would be depressed with nothing to do. But when it gets to Monday, many of us are already longing for the weekend and the prospect of escape. How did work become so tedious and stressful? And is there anything we can do to make it better?
Based on his popular Economist Bartleby column, Philip Coggan rewrites the rules of
work to help us survive the daily grind. Ranging widely, he encourages us to cut
through mindless jargon, pointless bureaucracy and endless meetings to find a new,
more creative - and less frustrating - way to get by and get on at work.
Incisive, original, and endlessly droll, this is the guide for beleaguered underlings and
harried higher-ups alike. As Rousseau might have said: "Man was born free, but is
everywhere stuck in a meeting." If you've ever thought there must be a better way, this
is the book for you.
The internet of things (IoT) has already proven its worth in fields
such as health, education, and urban transportation. Given the
rapid advancement of IoT along with artificial intelligence (AI)
and machine learning in recent years, it is believed that new age
technology will dramatically alter the way we live and work. One of
the areas where this paradigm may stand out in the future is the
domain of corporate diversity and inclusion. By modelling
intelligent behavior, IoT may detect possible bias and prejudice in
decision making, possibly eliminating patterns and biases that
hamper company capacity to recruit diversely and inclusively.
Promoting Inclusivity and Diversity Through Internet of Things in
Organizational Settings provides relevant theoretical frameworks
and the latest empirical research findings in the area. It examines
the empirical evidence on corporations and how IoT is being used to
create inclusiveness and diversity through electronic means.
Covering topics on occupational stress, digital transformation, and
digital diversification, this premier reference source is an
essential resource for business executives and leaders, human
resource managers, IT managers, social workers, sociologists,
researchers, and academicians.
Diversity is an issue that is pervasive in this globalized world.
As most countries are eager to ensure they are as diverse and
inclusive as possible, broadening the hemispheres of diversity in
the workplace is a crucial step. Consciously or unconsciously,
individuals tend to change the way they treat coworkers in the
workplace based on gender, age, and religion. In order for
businesses across the globe to achieve inclusive workplace
cultures, further study is required on the best practices,
challenges, and strategies of implementing diversity into policy.
Global Perspectives on Maintaining Gender, Age, and Religious
Diversity in the Workplace captures insights into global
perspectives on issues, challenges, and solutions for mitigating
gender, age, and religious diversity-related matters in the
workplace. The book aims to highlight policies and practices
prevalent in a variety of sectors in different countries around the
globe. Covering topics such as cross-cultural leadership, diversity
policy, and wellbeing, this reference work is crucial for business
owners, managers, human resources professionals, researchers,
scholars, academicians, practitioners, instructors, and students.
Empathy, diversity, inclusion, and soft skills are key building
blocks of an innovative workforce challenged to respond to the
ever-growing needs of the COVID-19 era. Organizations that value
diversity and inclusion are looking for ways to manage the shift of
workers and skills from traditional manufacturing to the
21st-century vision by incorporating new technology and tools. In
this new model, a diverse workforce is necessary, as creativity and
innovation grow from the skills that differentiate humans. Further
research into the next steps for using diversity and inclusion in
an efficient manner, discovering and training new skill sets, and
building sustainability into the creative process is needed to
fully embrace this new era of inclusion. Multidisciplinary Approach
to Diversity and Inclusion in the COVID-19-Era Workplace highlights
best practices of successful companies in the "new normal"
conditions caused by the pandemic and provides innovative research
on diversity and inclusion to help organizations navigate the
changing competitive global environment. Covering a range of topics
such as remote work, unconscious bias, and information literacy, it
is ideal for professors, researchers, academicians, practitioners,
human resource professionals, industry professionals, and students.
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