Abstract

Digital technologies enable the dispersal of office work from physical office buildings. The same technologies involve a counter tendency of concentration where offices are shared by different businesses, often for short periods, via the ‘space as service’ model. These opposing tendencies of workspace dispersal and concentration indicate the contingencies of technologies of work, in which their operations are mutually shaped by workplaces. Understanding what a technology of work is requires examining its situated actions and spaces of activity, like the office. Yet, the spatial characteristics of the present-day office demonstrate that ‘situatedness’ is by no means a straightforward vehicle for understanding contemporary technologies of work. Digital technologies tend less to divide space according to a specific function (i.e. work–life division), and more to create spaces of coordination that can adjust the definition of purposeful activity. Such spaces of coordination constitute the platformization of work with digital technologies in which spatial and temporal processes for instituting work extend beyond a single organization. Including but exceeding the ‘gig economy’ and ‘platform labour’, platformization indicates a wider reorganization of work through technologies that produces flexible arrangements of space and time, creating forms of independence, interdependence and dependency that challenge orders of work–life division.

Highlights

  • Digital technology has changed and continues to change the constitution of varied workplaces, from the automation of certain tasks to the possibilities for flexible working (Autor, 2015; Bissell, 2018; Richardson, 2018)

  • The material division of space as a place for work or not, can hold less significance for social organization than the capacity to define as work the operations of technology. By synthesizing these technological changes to office workplaces with the role of working space in defining office technologies, the article argues that the tendency of contemporary technologies of work is less to divide space according to a specific function, and more to create spaces of coordination that can adjust the definition of purposeful activity

  • The implication is that technologies of work today operate less in fixed divisions of space according to specific function, and more through spaces of coordination that can adjust the definition of purposeful activity

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Digital technology has changed and continues to change the constitution of varied workplaces, from the automation of certain tasks to the possibilities for flexible working (Autor, 2015; Bissell, 2018; Richardson, 2018). The dispersal and concentration of activities constituting present-day office work demonstrates how contemporary technologies coordinate working spaces that define as collectively productive a combination of otherwise often diffuse actors, where the conditions of arrangement are standardized and formatted by the technology.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call