Work
has been changing. One reason it has been changing is that the contexts
of work have been changing. Macroeconomic and societal conditions place
limitations and expectations on what work should do; technologies alter
what is possible; relations between employers and employees become more
or less amicable. As work has changed, its consequences have also
changed. Work: Contexts and Consequences brings
together the most important and influential articles in the field which
cover the long-term trends of the contexts and consequences of work at
the beginning of the new millenium. The volumes span diverse topics and
methodologies.
The editors have scanned decades of
literature to pick nearly 60 exemplars of excellent research and
scholarship on Work. These offer insight into recent changes in the
contexts of work, while also being extremely valuable as suggestions
about how research might fruitfully go forward.
The
articles are arranged in two categories, each of which has several
subtopics: articles in "Contexts of Work" look mainly at the situations
in which work takes place, and articles on "Consequences of Work" ask
what fruits come from work. Of course, these categories are
inter-linked: the consequences of work depend on the contexts of work,
and conversely, feedback paths make the contexts of work depend on the
consequences of work. The Editors provide a clear path through these
sections, enabling the reader to achieve a coherent understanding of
what Work has come to be, and where it may be going.
The
SAGE Library in Business and Management is a first-class series of
major works that brings together the most influential and
field-defining articles, both classical and contemporary, in a number
of key areas of research and inquiry in Business and Management.
Each
multi-volume set represents a collection of the essential published
works collated from the foremost publications in the field by an Editor
or Editorial Team of renowned international stature. They include a
full introduction, presenting a rationale for the selection and mapping
out the discipline’s past, present and likely future.
This
series is designed to be a ‘gold standard’ for university libraries
throughout the world with a programme or interest in Business and
Management Studies.