Employer Control of Employee Behaviour through Social Media

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Abstract

When once individuals could ‘clock off’ for the day and retreat into private spaces, these private activities are increasingly prone to being recorded, tagged and shared and brought to the attention of an individual’s employer. The unavoidable necessity for people to engage with each other online has blurred the boundaries between work life and private life, meaning that employers increasingly seek to control what employees do and say online, requiring individuals to carefully modify their behaviour in once private domains. As individuals become inured to the realities of being tracked and mined, the resigned cynicism of the situation is creating a culture in which freedom to ‘be yourself’ is undermined. This paper will explore examples of individuals who have faced consequences at work for their online behaviour in what once would have been considered their private domain. Using surveillance theory, it will seek to ask whether such a gap in the legal and regulatory sphere is at risk of submerging the individual into a docile workforce that is never ‘off the clock’.

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APA

Hook, S., & Noakes, S. (2019). Employer Control of Employee Behaviour through Social Media. Law, Technology and Humans, 1(1), 141–161. https://doi.org/10.5204/lthj.v1i0.1302

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