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Article

Welcome to the House of Fun: Work Space and Social Identity

Details

Citation

Baldry C & Hallier J (2010) Welcome to the House of Fun: Work Space and Social Identity. Economic and Industrial Democracy, 31 (1), pp. 150-172. http://eid.sagepub.com/; https://doi.org/10.1177/0143831X09351215

Abstract
Following the diffusion of HRM as the dominant legitimating managerial ideology, some employers have started to see the built working environment as a component in managing organisational culture and employee commitment. A good example is where the work space is designed to support a range of officially encouraged ¡®fun¡¯ activities at work. Drawing on recent research literature and from media reports of contemporary developments, this paper explores the consequences of such developments for employees¡¯ social identity formation and maintenance, with a particular focus on the office and customer service centre. Our analysis suggests that management¡¯s attempts to determine what is deemed fun may not only be resented by workers because it intrudes on their existing private identities but also because it seeks to re-shape their values and expression.

Keywords
commitment; organisational culture; Working environment; offices; Work environment; Corporate culture; Organizational behavior; Personnel management

Journal
Economic and Industrial Democracy: Volume 31, Issue 1

StatusPublished
Publication date28/02/2010
Publication date online01/12/2009
URL
PublisherSage / Department of Economic History, Uppsala University, Sweden
Publisher URL
ISSN0143-831X
eISSN1461-7099

People (1)

Professor Chris Baldry

Professor Chris Baldry

Emeritus Professor, Management, Work and Organisation

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