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Sullivan, Cath – New Technology, Work and Employment, 2003
Discusses the debate over definitions of teleworking and other home-based working. Argues that project-specific definitions are useful and inevitable. Challenges the assertion that a single definition should be used by all research. (Contains 36 references.) (JOW)
Descriptors: Definitions, Research Methodology, Teleworking, Working Hours

Mann, Sandi; Holdsworth, Lynn – New Technology, Work and Employment, 2003
Study 1 included interviews with 12 teleworkers and office workers. Study 2 surveyed 32 office workers and 30 teleworkers. Results suggest that teleworking has negative emotional impact in terms of such emotions as loneliness, irritability, worry, and guilt and that teleworkers experience significantly more mental health symptoms of stress and…
Descriptors: Adults, Emotional Response, Stress Variables, Teleworking

Pyoria, Pasi – New Technology, Work and Employment, 2003
Survey data from 1,775 workers indicate that, although Finland has a sophisticated technological infrastructure, only 4 percent of Finnish wage earners regard themselves as doing telework, and only 4 percent has tried it. Teleworking was rare even among those considered knowledge workers. (Contains 40 references.) (Author/JOW)
Descriptors: Adults, Foreign Countries, Tables (Data), Teleworking

Baines, Susan – New Technology, Work and Employment, 1999
Although freelancers who offer services to the media almost all work from home, they are not isolated in "electronic cottages." They heavily use electronic communications. Varied, broken, and changing career histories are the norm. (SK)
Descriptors: Career Development, Information Technology, Mass Media, Self Employment

Kerrin, Maire; Hone, Kate – New Technology, Work and Employment, 2001
College students (n=40) and nonstudent job seekers (n=20) rated four dimensions of telework. Results were plotted in cognitive maps. Students preferred office work to telework, citing lack of social interaction. Nonstudents, slightly older and more likely to be parents, slightly preferred telework. Targeting recruitment to account for these…
Descriptors: Cognitive Mapping, Job Applicants, Negative Attitudes, Recruitment

Baines, Susan – New Technology, Work and Employment, 2002
A study of home-based media workers found they were aware of discourses of freedom and innovation associated with teleworking, but they did not fit the reality of competing demands of domestic life and work. The research suggests that if home-based micro enterprises become more widespread, the results may be harsh for individuals and households as…
Descriptors: Adults, Family Work Relationship, Quality of Working Life, Self Employment

Felstead, Alan; Jewson, Nick; Phizacklea, Annie; Walters, Sally – New Technology, Work and Employment, 2002
Data from the Workplace Employee Relations Survey and Labour Force Survey identified employees who have the option of working at home and those required to work at home. Opportunity to choose is associated with higher-skilled, higher-paying occupations. Those required to work at home or denied the option include some of the most disadvantaged…
Descriptors: Demography, Employment Level, Employment Practices, Family Work Relationship

Stanworth, Celia – New Technology, Work and Employment, 1998
Review of Information Age literature found not enough evidence that information industries will reenergize economies or provide high-quality jobs. Virtual organizations are hard to identify. Women do the bulk of low-skill, low-paying telework jobs, reinforcing sex roles and class divisions. Remote workers are often vulnerable and cut off from…
Descriptors: Employment Practices, Information Technology, Organizational Change, Personnel Management

Simpson, Lyn; Daws, Leonie; Pini, Barbara; Wood, Leanne – New Technology, Work and Employment, 2003
Case studies of rural teleworking in an Australian government department and a community organization found that a key constraint is lack of telecommunications and services infrastructure. Teleworkers had differing views of working in isolation, depending on the nature of work roles, attitudes toward technology, and personal life experiences.…
Descriptors: Access to Computers, Community Organizations, Computer Attitudes, Foreign Countries

Baruch, Yehuda – New Technology, Work and Employment, 2000
Interviews with 60 British teleworkers showed that working at home did not change their employee identity; time management skills were crucial; reduction of distractions was a prime benefit; and the home environment provided better relationships and support. Telecommuting resulted in changed attitudes, satisfaction, less stress, and better…
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Employee Attitudes, Family Work Relationship, Foreign Countries