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Work in the 21st century : how do i log on? /

This book provides practical guidance for policy makers, managers and workers trying to better understand the processes underpinning changing work environments and labour markets, while further developing academic perspectives and theoretical debate on the changing nature of work and workplaces in t...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autores principales: Ross, Peter K. (Autor), Ressia, Susan (Autor), Sander, Elizabeth J. (Autor)
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Bingley, UK : Emerald Publishing Limited, [2017]
Edición:First edition.
Colección:Changing context of managing people.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Front Cover; Work in the 21st Century; Copyright Page; Contents; List of Tables; List of Figures; Abbreviations; Acknowledgments; Foreword; Introduction: Work in the 21st Century: How do I Log on?; Coverage and Structure of the Book; Section 1: The Changing Work Environment; Section 2: Entrepreneurship: Self-Employment in Globally Competitive Product and Labor Markets; Section 3: Global Virtual Labor Markets and the Rise of the Machines; Conclusions: Emerging Changes and Future Directions?; Section 1: The Changing Work Environment; Chapter 1 Spatial Design, Worker Productivity, and Well-Being.
  • 1.1. The Physical Work Environment and Spatial Design1.1.1. The Open-Plan Workplace; 1.1.2. Activity-Based Working: Free Addressing/Hot Desking; 1.1.3. The Segmented Office?; 1.1.4. Third Places/Public Realm; 1.2. Collaboration; 1.3. Enhancing Employee Well-Being and Productivity; 1.4. Conclusion; Chapter 2 Work as a Thing You Do, Not a Place You Go
  • Technological Versus Geographical Proximity; 2.1. Introduction; 2.2. Toward a "Mobile" Workforce; 2.3. Telework and Flexible Work Practices; 2.3.1. Women Workers; 2.4. New Ways of Working, Work/Life Balance, and Well-Being.
  • 2.4.1. Physical Workspace2.4.2. ICTs: Technical versus Operational Issues; 2.4.3. Organization and Management; 2.4.4. Culture; 2.5. Conclusions; Chapter 3 Coworking
  • Because Working Alone Sucks!; 3.1. Introduction; 3.2. The Rise of Coworking; 3.2.1. Coworking as an Alternative to Teleworking from Home; 3.3. Conclusion; Acknowledgments; Section 2: Entrepreneurship: Self-employment in Globally Competitive Product and Labor Markets; Chapter 4 Born Global? SME Entrepreneurship in a Cloud Context; 4.1. Introduction; 4.2. Cloud Computing and Entrepreneurship; 4.2.1. Cloud Computing.
  • 4.2.2. Cloud Drivers4.2.3. Entrepreneurship and Innovation; 4.2.4. "Born Global" versus "Born Again Global"; 4.2.5. Reduced Entry and Opportunity Costs; 4.2.6. Innovation and Collaboration; 4.3. Cloud Computing Challenges; 4.4. Conclusions; Acknowledgments; Chapter 5 Overcoming Labor Market Disenfranchisement: Entrepreneurship, Women, and Migrant Workers; 5.1. Introduction; 5.2. Women, Migrants, and Entrepreneurship; 5.2.1. Contribution of Migrant Entrepreneurial Activity; 5.3. Limitations to Entrepreneurship; 5.3.1. Gender, Ethnicity, and Culture; 5.3.2. Business Environment and Institutions.
  • 5.3.3. Human and Social Capital5.4. Entrepreneurship as Empowering; 5.4.1. ICT Access and the Digital Divide; 5.5. Conclusion; Section 3: Global Virtual Labor Markets and the Rise of the Machines; Chapter 6 Global Virtual Labor Markets: The "Human Cloud" and Offshore Employee Leasing; 6.1. The Outsourcing and Offshoring Context; 6.1.1. Offshoring and Outsourcing; 6.2. The Human Cloud and Offshore Employee Leasing; 6.2.1. The Human Cloud; 6.2.2. Offshore Employee Leasing (OEL); 6.3. The Social Impacts of Global Virtual Labor Markets (GVLMs); 6.4. Conclusion.