The subjective well-being of homeworkers across life domains
The subjective well-being of homeworkers across life domains
This paper extends the view of homeworking as a type of flexible working of employees in organisations aimed at improving work-life balance and job satisfaction, to a type of work that encapsulates significant changes of work towards increased self-employment and casual work, high proportions of which are performed in people’s homes. Such changes to work represent a reconfiguration of the spatial separation and relationship between place of work and place of residence. Through homeworking, this paper studies how changing geographies of work and workplaces impact on workers’ life satisfaction overall and across various aspects of their lives. Using a large representative longitudinal dataset for the United Kingdom, findings reveal that workers’ satisfaction with their job, income and leisure time is significantly shaped by homeworking and that the employment status (employee vs self-employed) and gender are important to understanding how homeworking is related with subjective well-being. Findings show that homeworking is positively related with leisure time satisfaction of men and women. Job satisfaction advances of homeworking are only observed for employees but not the self-employed. Men’s income satisfaction is decreased when they work as self-employed without employees in their homes. Future policies and research concerning workers’ subjective well-being need to pay attention to the continued trend towards individualized work in the own home.
self-employment, nonstandard work, flexible working, home-based work, gender
1326-1349
Reuschke, Darja
224493ce-38bc-455d-9341-55f8555e7e13
1 September 2019
Reuschke, Darja
224493ce-38bc-455d-9341-55f8555e7e13
Reuschke, Darja
(2019)
The subjective well-being of homeworkers across life domains.
Environment and Planning A, 51 (6), .
(doi:10.1177/0308518X19842583).
Abstract
This paper extends the view of homeworking as a type of flexible working of employees in organisations aimed at improving work-life balance and job satisfaction, to a type of work that encapsulates significant changes of work towards increased self-employment and casual work, high proportions of which are performed in people’s homes. Such changes to work represent a reconfiguration of the spatial separation and relationship between place of work and place of residence. Through homeworking, this paper studies how changing geographies of work and workplaces impact on workers’ life satisfaction overall and across various aspects of their lives. Using a large representative longitudinal dataset for the United Kingdom, findings reveal that workers’ satisfaction with their job, income and leisure time is significantly shaped by homeworking and that the employment status (employee vs self-employed) and gender are important to understanding how homeworking is related with subjective well-being. Findings show that homeworking is positively related with leisure time satisfaction of men and women. Job satisfaction advances of homeworking are only observed for employees but not the self-employed. Men’s income satisfaction is decreased when they work as self-employed without employees in their homes. Future policies and research concerning workers’ subjective well-being need to pay attention to the continued trend towards individualized work in the own home.
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Accepted/In Press date: 15 March 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 8 April 2019
Published date: 1 September 2019
Keywords:
self-employment, nonstandard work, flexible working, home-based work, gender
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 429160
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/429160
ISSN: 0308-518X
PURE UUID: 8d9e1917-5c79-4e03-a949-994004ad529f
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Date deposited: 22 Mar 2019 17:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 07:41
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