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@article{ Rubery2005,
 title = {Working Time, Industrial Relations and the Employment Relationship},
 author = {Rubery, Jill and Ward, Kevin and Grimshaw, Damian and Beynon, Huw},
 journal = {Time & Society},
 number = {1},
 pages = {89-111},
 volume = {14},
 year = {2005},
 doi = {https://doi.org/10.1177/0961463X05050300},
 urn = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-223090},
 abstract = {This article explores the erosion of the standard working-time model associated with                the UK's voluntarist system of industrial relations, and argues that its                renegotiation is likely to be a critical factor in shaping the employment                relationship of the future. As numerous studies over the last two decades have                revealed, organizations have increasingly seen ‘time’ as a                variable that can be manipulated to increase productivity or expand service                provision, through making workers work harder, longer or according to management                demands. These studies have also drawn our attention to the wider consequences of                the increasing demands that organizations place on their employees in the name of                ‘flexibility’, impacting both on what workers do while at work                and how they organize and plan the other aspects of their lives. This article brings                together two literatures, one on time and the other on industrial relations, and                suggests that new working-time arrangements are changing the wage-effort bargain and                blurring the previously clearly demarcated boundary between work and non-work time.                Drawing on qualitative fieldwork in six large UK-based organizations, we argue that                there is evidence of a move towards a new ‘temporality’ based on                an employer-led model of working time, which differs significantly from both the                traditional UK system of working-time regulation and that found in Continental Europe.},
}