Organizational working time regimes: Drivers, consequences and attempts to change patterns of excessive working hours

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Blagoy Blagoev - , Leuphana University of Lüneburg (Author)
  • Sara Louise Muhr - , Copenhagen Business School (Author)
  • Renate Ortlieb - , University of Graz (Author)
  • Georg Schreyoegg - , Free University of Berlin (Author)

Abstract

A 40-hour working week is the norm in Europe, yet some organizations require 60 or more working hours and in investment banks an alarming 120-hour weeks are known to be worked. What is more, these organizations often require workers to be permanently on call and demonstrate high production rates. Consequences of such practices include frazzled employees, with their families' and their own health under pressure. This article introduces our special issue of the German Journal of Human Resource Management. It tackles the many reasons behind excessive work hours and failed attempts to change working time arrangements in organizations. It first identifies three core ideas in previous research, namely the dispersed nature of regimes of excessive working hours, their high levels of persistence and their constitution at multiple levels of analysis. It then summarizes the contributions in this special issue. Finally, it proposes avenues for future research, such as focusing on the genesis and the historicity of organizational working time regimes, studying the interrelation of factors across multiple levels of analysis, and probing new theories to explain the extreme persistence of excessive working hours. The overarching aim of our special issue in this core area of human resource management is to contribute to an understanding of organizational working time regimes and the tenacity of excessive working hours in an effort to deepen our knowledge of how to change them.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)155-167
Number of pages13
JournalGerman Journal of Human Resource Management
Volume32
Issue number3-4
Publication statusPublished - 2018
Peer-reviewedYes
Externally publishedYes

External IDs

Scopus 85052335408

Keywords

Sustainable Development Goals

Keywords

  • Change, excessive working hours, overwork, persistence, working time, working time flexibility, SOCIAL IDENTITY, PATH DEPENDENCE, ECONOMIC-EVALUATION, IDEAL WORKER, EXTREME JOBS, FLEXIBILITY, HEALTH, FAMILY, SELF, ETHNOGRAPHY