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Work-Life Advantage
ISBN/GTIN

Work-Life Advantage

Sustaining Regional Learning and Innovation
BookPaperback
Ranking172571inSozialwissenschaften
CHF47.90

Description

Work-Life Advantage analyses how employer-provision of 'family-friendly' working arrangements - designed to help workers better reconcile work, home and family - can also enhance firms' capacities for learning and innovation, in pursuit of long-term competitive advantage and socially inclusive growth.
_ Brings together major debates in labour geography, feminist geography, and regional learning in novel ways, through a focus on the shifting boundaries between work, home, and family
_ Addresses a major gap in the scholarly research surrounding the narrow 'business case' for work-life balance by developing a more socially progressive, workerist 'dual agenda'
_ Challenges and disrupts masculinist assumptions of the "ideal worker" and the associated labour market marginalization of workers with significant home and family commitments
_ Based on 10 years of research with over 300 IT workers and 150 IT firms in the UK and Ireland, with important insights for professional workers and knowledge-intensive companies around the world
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Details

ISBN/GTIN978-1-118-94483-7
Product TypeBook
BindingPaperback
Publication countryUnited Kingdom
Publishing date08/12/2017
Pages248 pages
LanguageEnglish
SizeWidth 152 mm, Height 229 mm, Thickness 13 mm
Weight318 g
Article no.29678501
CatalogsBuchzentrum
Data source no.22954821
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Series

Author

Al James is Reader in Economic Geography at Newcastle University, UK. His research interests include gendered labour geographies of work-life and socially inclusive growth; the regional cultural economy of learning and innovation; and the hybrid economic/development geographies of India's new service economy. His work has been funded by the UK's Economic and Social Research Council, Nuffield Foundation, Arts and Humanities Research Council, and Isaac Newton Trust. He has published in a wide range of leading international journals, including Progress in Human Geography, Journal of Economic Geography, Regional Studies, Geoforum, Gender Work and Organization, Gender Place and Culture, Environment and Planning A, and Development and Change. From 2008-2011, he was Secretary of the RGS-IBG's Economic Geography Research Group.