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The emerging world of virtual work is not tied to physical
workplaces or particular locations, but is dispersed and footloose.
It is frequently precarious, and blurs the boundaries between work
and non-work, production and consumption. Contributors to this
wide-ranging volume of case studies identify the growing and
diverse army of virtual workers. Building from an overarching
introduction which discusses the salient features of virtual work,
this collection considers the challenges in analysing the class
position of virtual workers. Virtual Workers and the Global Labour
Market features international examples of emerging occupations and
working conditions in new media, gaming, journalism, advertising
and branding, software development and offshore services.
Cross-disciplinary insights from across the social sciences inform
contributions on labour market entry, employment relations,
precariousness, the dynamics of virtual teams, and cyberbullying,
in order to illustrate the diversity of virtual work, its
circumstances and its labour force.
For four decades now, information and communication technologies
have been seen as principal drivers of socio-economic change.
Stimulated in recent years by the Internet, the National
Information Infrastructure, and European Information Society
strategies, the "Information Society" has undergone a new wave of
developments. In its new form, the Information Society directly
affects the everyday lives of citizens, provoking concerns about
the future of work, information overload, access to continuing
education, surveillance, and privacy. This volume examines a wide
range of issues at stake in the European Union, from employment and
the labor market, to the domestication of technologies in
households, to larger implications for political processes and
democracy. Extending comparisons to other industrialized countries,
it demonstrates that the Information Society is far too diverse and
rich to be typified in simplistic dichotomies such as information
"haves" and "have nots" and that simple upbeat or pessimistic
responses to the new technologies are surely false messengers for
the future. The authors discern general social trends and patterns
in the way that these very important technologies already affect
our lives and work. But they find there is still considerable room
to use the technologies as a positive force for social change or,
equally, to fail to take up any positive opportunities. This book
helps broaden and inform communication technology debates worldwide
and will be of interest to academics, students, industrialists,
policymakers, and anyone who wishes to better understand the
impacts of the new Information Society in Europe and beyond.
A new book offering a broad overview of the debates about
technologies and gender relations at work in a range of
occupational areas. Innovative in its approach it deals with gender
relations in terms of the ways in which they influence the design
and development of technologies, and how gender relations are
themselves shaped by technologies. The book will draw heavily on
the theoretical perspective looking at the ways in which sexual
divisions of labour and gender relations in the workplace
profoundly affect the direction and pace of technological change,
and tracks the development of certain technologies showing how,
through their evolution, they embody these social relations.
A new book offering a broad overview of the debates about
technologies and gender relations at work in a range of
occupational areas. Innovative in its approach it deals with gender
relations in terms of the ways in which they influence the design
and development of technologies, and how gender relations are
themselves shaped by technologies. The book will draw heavily on
the theoretical perspective looking at the ways in which sexual
divisions of labour and gender relations in the workplace
profoundly affect the direction and pace of technological change,
and tracks the development of certain technologies showing how,
through their evolution, they embody these social relations.
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