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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Alternative Work Arrangements: Two Images of the New World of Work

TLDR
This paper reviewed the literature on alternative work arrangements published since the most recent major review of nonstandard work by Ashford et al. (2007) and identified three dimensions of flexibility that undergird alternative work arrangement: flexibility in the employment relationship, flexibility in scheduling of work, and flexibility in where work is accomplished.
Abstract
Alternative work arrangements continue to increase in number and variety. We review the literature on alternative work arrangements published since the most recent major review of nonstandard work by Ashford et al. (2007). We look across the research findings to identify three dimensions of flexibility that undergird alternative work arrangements: (a) flexibility in the employment relationship, (b) flexibility in the scheduling of work, and (c) flexibility in where work is accomplished. We identify two images of the new world of work—one for high-skill workers who choose alternative work arrangements and the other for low-skill workers who struggle to make a living and are beholden to the needs of the organization. We close with future directions for research and practice for tending to the first image and moving away from the second image of the new world of work.

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COVID-19 and the workplace: Implications, issues, and insights for future research and action.

TL;DR: A broad-scope overview provides an integrative approach for considering the implications of COVID-19 for work, workers, and organizations while also identifying issues for future research and insights to inform solutions.
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The sharing economy and digital platforms: A review and research agenda

TL;DR: The notion of platform centralization/decentralization as an effective organizing principle for the variety of perspectives on the sharing economy, and also evaluate scholars' treatment of technology itself are presented.
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Flexible employment relationships and careers in times of the COVID-19 pandemic.

TL;DR: How the work and careers of individuals in flexible employment relationships might get affected by the COVID-19 pandemic is discussed and how the pandemic can contribute to the ramification of flexible Employment relationships is outlined.
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From surviving to thriving in the gig economy: A research agenda for individuals in the new world of work

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the predictable challenges that individuals confront when working in this manner, including remaining viable, staying organized, maintaining identity, sustaining relationships, and coping emotionally, and articulate the work and relational behaviors necessary for such thriving, and the cognitive and emotional capabilities that undergird them.
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Automation, Algorithms, and Beyond: Why Work Design Matters More Than Ever in a Digital World

TL;DR: This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: Parker, S.K. and Grote, G. (2020), Automation, Algorithms, and Beyond: Why Work Design Matters More Than Ever in a Digital World.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Precarious Work, Insecure Workers: Employment Relations in Transition

TL;DR: The growth of precarious work since the 1970s has emerged as a core contemporary concern within politics, in the media, and among researchers as discussed by the authors, and it contrasts with the re...
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The Work Design Questionnaire (WDQ): Developing and validating a comprehensive measure for assessing job design and the nature of work.

TL;DR: The results showed that social support incrementally predicted satisfaction beyond motivational work characteristics but was not related to increased training and compensation requirements, which provides new insight into how to avoid the trade-offs commonly observed in work design research.
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Integrating Motivational, Social, and Contextual Work Design Features: A Meta-Analytic Summary and Theoretical Extension of the Work Design Literature

TL;DR: The authors developed and meta-analytically examined hypotheses designed to test and extend work design theory by integrating motivational, social, and work context characteristics to suggest numerous opportunities for the continued development of work design Theory and practice.
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The good, the bad, and the unknown about telecommuting: meta-analysis of psychological mediators and individual consequences.

TL;DR: A theoretical framework and meta-analysis of 46 studies in natural settings involving 12,883 employees found that telecommuting had small but mainly beneficial effects on proximal outcomes, such as perceived autonomy and (lower) work-family conflict.
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Bad jobs in America: standard and nonstandard employment relations and job quality in the United States

TL;DR: This paper examined the relationship between nonstandard employment (on-call work and day labor, temporary-help agency employment, employment with contract companies, independent contracting, other self-employment, and part-time employment in "conventional" jobs) and exposure to "bad" job characteristics, using data from the 1995 Current Population Survey.
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