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Chapter 1 - Introductions To The Study of Work

The document discusses definitions of work and what sociologists study about work, including paid and unpaid work, how work impacts identity and social outcomes, and how sociologists research various aspects of work using quantitative and qualitative methods.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
19 views

Chapter 1 - Introductions To The Study of Work

The document discusses definitions of work and what sociologists study about work, including paid and unpaid work, how work impacts identity and social outcomes, and how sociologists research various aspects of work using quantitative and qualitative methods.

Uploaded by

kris
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Chapter 1: Introductions to the Study of Work

What is Work?
 Traditional, and economic definitions focus on activity that produces a good or service
for the market
- Excludes much activity we generally view as work
o Ex. Washing car and cleaning living space
 Defining work is more complex than it appears
 Paid work: an activity that a person receives payment for performing

What About Unpaid Work?


Dictionary Definition
 “Exertion of energy, physical or mental; effort directed to some purpose or end”
- This would encompass paid work + unpaid work
- Might be too broad
Marxian Definition
 An activity that produces a “use value” – a good, or service useful to us; what is
produced has value
- Example: doing dishes
Tilly and Tilly (1998)
 Work is “human effort that adds use value to goods and services”
- Encompasses paid work and domestic work (ex. Doing laundry)
- Unpaid work is essential to our daily and generational survival
o Volunteer work is essential to our society

In What Ways is Work Important?


 Income
 Social interaction and social relationships
 Health and well-being
 Prestige/stigma
 Identity
 Attitudes, outlook

Sociologists Are Interested in Work as A Social Activity


 Work contributes something to society
 People work with others and within social institutions
- Ex. Work is embedded in systems of social relations
 Work produces “social outcome” for works – income, identity, status, social relations
and impact on health
- Can give you money, status
- Impacts health and well-being
- It can define you
o One can be embarrassed if their job is not good
- You spend a lot of energy at work, and you rest for more energy to work again

What Sociologists Study:


 The link between work and social outcomes, especially, social inequality, health and
well-being
 Dramatic transformations occurring at work and what people do
- Government, globalization and people
 Impact of working on people, as work dominates most people’s days
- How people react and cope with work
- Effects how you sleep, when you sleep, your leisure activities, relationships
 The ways in which people shape work
- Unions and technology
 Social characteristics of workers
- Who works where? How much? For how long?
 Organization of work
- Content of work
- How this relates to other social institutions
 Overall, institutions, processes, interactions and outcomes are what sociologists are
interested in

Work Serves An…


1. Economic role: individual and social
- Work contributes to economic growth
- Workers produce goods and services, and in turn receive a wage
- As production and employment with a business grows, so does the variety of goods
and services offered
2. Social role: identity, fulfillment, satisfaction, social interaction, status
 The meanings attached to work vary
- Instrumental attitudes: means to an end
o A thing not valued or important but is useful in achieving an aim
 You don’t like your job, but you’re doing it because you need
experience
o Provide an individual with more rewards than punishments
- Emotional attitudes: work a source of satisfaction, meaning
o You like your job
o Not focused on what it gives you, but you feel satisfaction

What Makes Work Enjoyable?


 Friendly coworkers, sense of accomplishment, flexible hours, health benefits, feeling
valued, good management and great pay

What Makes Work Not Enjoyable?


 Rude boss, long hours, making less than minimum wage, unsafe working conditions, lack
of respect, commuting, segregation in many forms

How Sociologists Research Work


1. Quantitative Methodologies
- Uncover trends in employment, unemployment, distribution of people across
occupations
2. Qualitative – Interviews
- To understand how people experience work
3. Qualitative – Ethnography
- Working a job can provide new insights through critically reflecting on lived
experience
4. Qualitative – Content Analysis
- Examine regulations, rules, policies, written reports on work and organizations
5. Case Study Analysis
- Blend methods to look at a case (occupation, workplace) in more depth to
understand organization and experience together
6. Experimental Methods
- Various real-world, and occasional lab experiments can shed light on how people
make decisions about who to hire, or how to present themselves on the job market
7. Social-Historical Methods
- Understand the changing nature of work, by studying work and workers in the past

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