Working under intensive surveillance: When does 'measuring everything that moves' become intolerable?

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Abstract

We examine how call-center employees draw on opposed discourses to understand the purpose and consequences of performance measurement as workplace surveillance. Sometimes the workers saw performance measurement as a legitimate and impartial managerial tool serving the interests of everyone in the organization (e.g. by exposing free-riding, etc.). Other times, they saw performance measurement as intrusive and oppressive; imposed on them by managers who, as agents of employers, used it to serve a narrow set of interests (e.g. by intensifying work, etc.). Our analysis depicts how employees used an ironical process of predicate logic to develop flexible meaning-making strategies to cope with the apparent conflicts in meaning that arose from the two opposed discourses. We conclude by developing a three step method for the practical analysis of such ironical situations of competing discourses that facilitates our ability to reconsider and reconfigure meaning in more useful ways. © The Tavistock Institute 2011.

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APA

Sewell, G., Barker, J. R., & Nyberg, D. (2012). Working under intensive surveillance: When does “measuring everything that moves” become intolerable? Human Relations, 65(2), 189–215. https://doi.org/10.1177/0018726711428958

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