This study explores full-time workers' understanding of and assumptions about part-time work against six job quality components identified in recent literature. Forty interviews were conducted with employees in a public sector agency in Australia, a study context where part-time work is ostensibly ‘good quality’ and is typically long term, voluntary, involving secure contracts (i.e. permanent rather than casual) and having predictable hours distributed evenly over the week and year. Despite strong collective bargaining arrangements as well as substantial legal and industrial obligations, the findings revealed some serious concerns for part-time job quality. These concerns included reduced responsibilities and lesser access to high status roles and projects, a lack of access to promotion opportunities, increased work intensity and poor workplace support. The highly gendered, part-time labour market also means that it is women who disproportionately experience this disadvantage. To foster equity, greater attention needs to focus on monitoring and enhancing job quality, regardless of hours worked.
Journal article
'Full time is a given here': part-time versus full-time job quality
British Journal of Management, Vol.20(2), pp.143-157
2009
Metrics
50 Record Views
Abstract
Details
- Title
- 'Full time is a given here': part-time versus full-time job quality
- Creators
- Paula McDonald - Queensland University of TechnologyLisa Bradley - Queensland University of TechnologyKerry Brown - Queensland University of Technology
- Publication Details
- British Journal of Management, Vol.20(2), pp.143-157
- Identifiers
- 1359; 991012821843202368
- Academic Unit
- Faculty of Business, Law and Arts; School of Business and Tourism
- Resource Type
- Journal article