Description

Book Synopsis
New information and communications technologies have revolutionized daily life and work in the 21st century. This insightful book demonstrates how telework has evolved in the last four decades, as technological developments have improved our capacity to work remotely.

Based on a new conceptual framework, this book explores the global variations in telework, examining the effects on working conditions and individual and organizational performance. Breaking the traditional intellectual conception that telework is performed only in the home, this book surveys the full breadth of working environments, as technology allows employees increased working mobility. Contributors expose a profound ambiguity surrounding the effects of 21st-century telework, revealing that its advantages and disadvantages may simply be two sides of the same coin.

This timely book is crucial reading for researchers of labour and employment interested in the evolution of contemporary telework and the influence of modern technologies in the workplace. Policy-makers will also benefit from this book's concrete policy recommendations to improve the practice of telework.

Contributors include: S. Boiarov, P. D'Cruz, A. Dal Colletto, L. Gschwind, T. Harnish, K. Lister, A. Mello, J.C. Messenger, E. Noronha, A. Sato, O. Vargas



Trade Review
'This volume explores the development, forms, and effects of telework in countries from different regions around the world, including Argentina, Brazil, ten Member States of the European Union (EU), India, Japan, and the United States. A must read for everyone who wants to understand the different ''generations'' of telework and its impact on working life, health and safety and productivity.'
--Gerhard Bosch, University Duisburg-Essen, Germany

'A valuable, long-term and comparative perspective on the continuously developing interface between work and the gradual advance in telecommunications technology that facilitates it to be done anytime, anywhere - in-home, off-site or around the globe. This carefully curated compilation will be useful to researchers, policy-makers, organizations, and anyone trying to keep up the pace of their own knowledge of the various effects of this transformation on well-being and organizations - good, evil or a bit of both - for workers, employers and countries.'
--Lonnie Golden, Pennsylvania State University, Abington, US



Table of Contents
Contents: Introduction: Telework in the 21st century – an evolutionary perspective 1 Jon C. Messenger PART I ADVANCED ECONOMIES 1. Telework and its effects in Europe 36 Lutz Gschwind and Oscar Vargas 2. Telework and its effects in Japan 76 Akio Sato 3. Telework and its effects in the United States 128 Kate Lister and Tom Harnish PART II EMERGING ECONOMIES 4. Telework and its effects in Argentina 172 Sonia Boiarov 5. Telework and its effects in Brazil 211 Alvaro Mello and Armando Dal Colletto 6. Organization advantage: Experience of telework in India 255 Ernesto Noronha and Premilla D’Cruz 7. Conclusions and recommendations for policy and practice 286 Jon C. Messenger Index 317

Telework in the 21st Century: An Evolutionary

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Order before 4pm today for delivery by Mon 19 Jan 2026.

A Hardback by Jon C. Messenger

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    View other formats and editions of Telework in the 21st Century: An Evolutionary by Jon C. Messenger

    Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
    Publication Date: 22/11/2019
    ISBN13: 9781789903744, 978-1789903744
    ISBN10: 1789903742

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    New information and communications technologies have revolutionized daily life and work in the 21st century. This insightful book demonstrates how telework has evolved in the last four decades, as technological developments have improved our capacity to work remotely.

    Based on a new conceptual framework, this book explores the global variations in telework, examining the effects on working conditions and individual and organizational performance. Breaking the traditional intellectual conception that telework is performed only in the home, this book surveys the full breadth of working environments, as technology allows employees increased working mobility. Contributors expose a profound ambiguity surrounding the effects of 21st-century telework, revealing that its advantages and disadvantages may simply be two sides of the same coin.

    This timely book is crucial reading for researchers of labour and employment interested in the evolution of contemporary telework and the influence of modern technologies in the workplace. Policy-makers will also benefit from this book's concrete policy recommendations to improve the practice of telework.

    Contributors include: S. Boiarov, P. D'Cruz, A. Dal Colletto, L. Gschwind, T. Harnish, K. Lister, A. Mello, J.C. Messenger, E. Noronha, A. Sato, O. Vargas



    Trade Review
    'This volume explores the development, forms, and effects of telework in countries from different regions around the world, including Argentina, Brazil, ten Member States of the European Union (EU), India, Japan, and the United States. A must read for everyone who wants to understand the different ''generations'' of telework and its impact on working life, health and safety and productivity.'
    --Gerhard Bosch, University Duisburg-Essen, Germany

    'A valuable, long-term and comparative perspective on the continuously developing interface between work and the gradual advance in telecommunications technology that facilitates it to be done anytime, anywhere - in-home, off-site or around the globe. This carefully curated compilation will be useful to researchers, policy-makers, organizations, and anyone trying to keep up the pace of their own knowledge of the various effects of this transformation on well-being and organizations - good, evil or a bit of both - for workers, employers and countries.'
    --Lonnie Golden, Pennsylvania State University, Abington, US



    Table of Contents
    Contents: Introduction: Telework in the 21st century – an evolutionary perspective 1 Jon C. Messenger PART I ADVANCED ECONOMIES 1. Telework and its effects in Europe 36 Lutz Gschwind and Oscar Vargas 2. Telework and its effects in Japan 76 Akio Sato 3. Telework and its effects in the United States 128 Kate Lister and Tom Harnish PART II EMERGING ECONOMIES 4. Telework and its effects in Argentina 172 Sonia Boiarov 5. Telework and its effects in Brazil 211 Alvaro Mello and Armando Dal Colletto 6. Organization advantage: Experience of telework in India 255 Ernesto Noronha and Premilla D’Cruz 7. Conclusions and recommendations for policy and practice 286 Jon C. Messenger Index 317

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