Will working from home solve many of society's ills, or create new ghettos? This book analyzes the experiences to look at workload, mobility, work status and gender to understand the implications of telecommuting on employment policies, community planning and daily life patterns.
Will working from home solve many of society's ills, or create new ghettos? This book analyzes the experiences to look at workload, mobility, work status and gender to understand the implications of telecommuting on employment policies, community planning and daily life patterns.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Penny Gurstein is Associate Professor at the UBCSchool of Community and Regional Planning and Chair of the Centre forHuman Settlements, where she specializes in urban design, participatoryplanning processes, and the sociocultural aspects of communityplanning.
Inhaltsangabe
Figures and Tables Acknowledgments 1. Telework As Restructured Work 2. Profiling the Teleworker: Contextualizing Telework 3. Working at Home and Being at Home: Blurred Boundaries 4. A Strategy of a Dispensable Workforce: Telework in Canada 5. Localizing the Networked Economy: A Vancouver Case Study 6. "I Don't Have a Home, I Live in My Office": Transformations in the Spaces of Daily Life 7. Convergence: Telework As Everywhere, Every Time 8. Conclusion Appendices A. Survey Instrument of California Study: Interview Schedule for Study on Social and Environmental Impact of Working at Home B. Survey Instrument of Canadian Survey: Telework and Home-Based Employment Survey C. Respondent Occupations, California Study D. Respondent Occupations, Canadian Survey Notes Bibliography Index
Figures and Tables Acknowledgments 1. Telework As Restructured Work 2. Profiling the Teleworker: Contextualizing Telework 3. Working at Home and Being at Home: Blurred Boundaries 4. A Strategy of a Dispensable Workforce: Telework in Canada 5. Localizing the Networked Economy: A Vancouver Case Study 6. "I Don't Have a Home, I Live in My Office": Transformations in the Spaces of Daily Life 7. Convergence: Telework As Everywhere, Every Time 8. Conclusion Appendices A. Survey Instrument of California Study: Interview Schedule for Study on Social and Environmental Impact of Working at Home B. Survey Instrument of Canadian Survey: Telework and Home-Based Employment Survey C. Respondent Occupations, California Study D. Respondent Occupations, Canadian Survey Notes Bibliography Index
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