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  1. Post-Fordist Work: A Man's World?: Gender and Working Overtime in the Netherlands.Siegwart Lindenberg, Suzan Lewis, Arie Glebbeek & Patricia Van Echtelt - 2009 - Gender and Society 23 (2):188-214.
    There is debate about whether the post-Fordist or high-performance work organization can overcome the disadvantages women encounter in traditional gendered organizations. Some authors argue that substituting a performance logic for control by the clock offers opportunities for combining work and family life in a more natural way. Critics respond that these organizational reforms do not address the nonresponsibility of firms for caring duties at a more fundamental level. The authors address this debate through an analysis of overtime work, using data (...)
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  • Paradoxes from the Individualization of Human Resource Management: The Case of Telework.Laurent Taskin & Valérie Devos - 2005 - Journal of Business Ethics 62 (1):13-24.
    In the context of change to the “new modernity” described in Beck’s work, companies develop management modes and methods that focus more and more on individuals. Constitutive of the individualization process, human resources practices have become ambivalent as the process itself. This contribution examines how a managerial and organizational innovation as telework contributes to the process of individualization, and the paradoxes it addresses to management. At the interface of the social and the technical, teleworking appears as a flexible arrangement, meeting (...)
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  • Glass Ceilings & 100-Hour Couples: What the Opt-Out Phenomenon Can Teach Us about Work and Family.[author unknown] - 2010
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