Despotism on demand : how power operates in the flexible workplace
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Bibliographic Information
Despotism on demand : how power operates in the flexible workplace
ILR Press, 2020
- : pbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Despotism on Demand draws attention to the impact of flexible scheduling on managerial power and workplace control. When we understand paid work as a power relationship, argues Alex J. Wood, we see how the spread of precarious scheduling constitutes flexible despotism; a novel regime of control within the workplace.
Wood believes that flexible despotism represents a new domain of inequality, in which the postindustrial working class increasingly suffers a scheduling nightmare. By investigating two of the largest retailers in the world he uncovers how control in the contemporary "flexible firm" is achieved through the insidious combination of "flexible discipline" and "schedule gifts." Flexible discipline provides managers with an arbitrary means by which to punish workers, but flexible scheduling also requires workers to actively win favor with managers in order to receive "schedule gifts": more or better hours. Wood concludes that the centrality of precarious scheduling to control means that for those at the bottom of the postindustrial labor market the future of work will increasingly be one of flexible despotism.
Table of Contents
Flexible Despotism: An Introduction
Power at Work
1. Internal States in the UK
2. Internal States in the U.S.
The Despotism of Time
3. Despotic Time in the UK: Overcoming Hegemonic Constraints
4. Despotic Time in the U.S.: Undermining Worker Organization
The Dynamics of Work and Spaces of Resistance
5. The Dynamics of Work and Scheduling Gifts
6. Limits of Control and Spaces of Resistance
Conclusions: Control in the Twenty-First Century
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