Tra gli autori anche Uma Rani, ospite di Biennale Democrazia lo
scorso gennaio
(http://biennaledemocrazia.it/biennale-democrazia-2023/uma-rani/).
jc
The future of remote work
Debates on the future of work have taken a more fundamental turn in
the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic. Early in 2020, when large
sections of the workforce were prevented from coming to their usual
places of work, remote work became the only way for many to continue
to perform their professions. What had been a piecemeal, at times
truly sluggish, evolution towards a multilocation approach to work
suddenly turned into an abrupt, radical and universal shift. It
quickly became clear that the consequences of this shift were far
more significant and far-reaching than simply changing the
workplace’s address. They involved a series of rapid, blockbuster
transformations that were going to outlast the ‘mandatory lockdown’
phase of the pandemic.
The 12 chapters collected in this volume provide a multidisciplinary
perspective on the impact and the future trajectories of remote
work. They raise, discuss and explore fundamental questions emerging
around remote work: from the nexus between the location from where
work is performed and how it is performed to how remote locations
may affect the way work is managed and organised, as well as the
applicability of existing legislation. Additional questions concern
remote work’s environmental and social impact and the rapidly
changing nature of the relationship between work and life.
The contributions in this edited volume develop along several
complementary axes, ranging from the discussion of global and
societal dynamics to the implications for the contractual
relationship between employers and workers. The transformation of
the spatial component of work is considered both as a potential
paradigm shift for the world of work and as a challenge for the
implementation of specific regulatory regimes. An important insight
that emerges from the multidimensional approach of this volume is
that the establishment of a worker centred future of (remote) work
requires the exploration and development of constructive pathways at
different levels and in different directions involving the role of
regulators, courts, trade unions, researchers, businesses and
workers themselves
https://www.etui.org/publications/future-remote-work