Remote working and spatial implications in Wales: report commissioned by the Welsh Parliament
Remote working and spatial implications in Wales: report commissioned by the Welsh Parliament
The work was commissioned under the Senedd Research COVID-19 Expert Register scheme, through which academics assist the Senedd with its work on the impacts of the COVID-19.
The EIS Committee requested the study to inform its inquiry on Remote Working: Implications for Wales, which it undertook following the Welsh Government announcing a long-term ambition for 30% of the Welsh workforce to work remotely on a regular basis. The Committee was keen to build a greater evidence base in relation to remote working, as this is an emerging policy area.
The report covers:
geographical analysis of home working trends;
trends in the use of co-working spaces;
analysis of the different types of co-working spaces that exist in Wales; and
international best practice around governmental support for co-working spaces.
Wales, Working at home
Reuschke, Darja
224493ce-38bc-455d-9341-55f8555e7e13
Clifton, Nick
eb84610f-248a-448d-81ee-6a5c3d4d7156
Long, Jed
c1a4652d-838b-4283-a824-6a281a6f6200
10 March 2021
Reuschke, Darja
224493ce-38bc-455d-9341-55f8555e7e13
Clifton, Nick
eb84610f-248a-448d-81ee-6a5c3d4d7156
Long, Jed
c1a4652d-838b-4283-a824-6a281a6f6200
Reuschke, Darja, Clifton, Nick and Long, Jed
(2021)
Remote working and spatial implications in Wales: report commissioned by the Welsh Parliament
Welsh Parliament
23pp.
Record type:
Monograph
(Project Report)
Abstract
The work was commissioned under the Senedd Research COVID-19 Expert Register scheme, through which academics assist the Senedd with its work on the impacts of the COVID-19.
The EIS Committee requested the study to inform its inquiry on Remote Working: Implications for Wales, which it undertook following the Welsh Government announcing a long-term ambition for 30% of the Welsh workforce to work remotely on a regular basis. The Committee was keen to build a greater evidence base in relation to remote working, as this is an emerging policy area.
The report covers:
geographical analysis of home working trends;
trends in the use of co-working spaces;
analysis of the different types of co-working spaces that exist in Wales; and
international best practice around governmental support for co-working spaces.
Text
Remote working report Dr Darja Reuschke
Available under License Other.
More information
Published date: 10 March 2021
Keywords:
Wales, Working at home
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 456697
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/456697
PURE UUID: 8a0e860b-69e1-44cd-9503-912e0bf84997
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 09 May 2022 17:15
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:41
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Contributors
Author:
Nick Clifton
Author:
Jed Long
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