Working Time Arrangements and Recreation: Making Time for Weekends When Working Long Hours
Work time spread across the entire week, rather than the conventional five day working week, has meant that workers are now less able to utilise longer stretches of recreation time especially in gaining access to a full two-day break over a weekend. This paper explores the issues contributing to workers' acquisition of longer recreation time. It seeks to determine the effects of this acquisition on the quality of working and non-working time for the employee through a study of work-life balance in the construction industry. It finds that weekends are more important to achieving work-life balance than shorter days over a six-day week when working long hours. Further, 'personal time' is a key element in achieving satisfactory work-life balance for employees, and this type of 'time' is often forgone in trying to integrate the necessary and desired non-work activities in the shorter time available to workers.
Year of publication: |
2010
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Authors: | Brown, K. ; Bradley, L. ; Lingard, H. ; Townsend, K. ; Ling, S. |
Published in: |
Australian Bulletin of Labour. - National Institute of Labour Studies (NILS). - Vol. 36.2010, 2, 25972, p. 194-213
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Publisher: |
National Institute of Labour Studies (NILS) |
Saved in:
freely available
Type of publication: | Article |
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Notes: | Brown, K.; Bradley, L.; Lingard, H.; Townsend, K.; Ling, S. 2010. Working Time Arrangements and Recreation: Making Time for Weekends When Working Long Hours. Australian Bulletin of Labour, Vol. 36 No. 2, pp.194-213. |
Source: |
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010548932
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