Publication | Closed Access
The Role of Gender in Varying Forms of Flexible Working
99
Citations
21
References
2009
Year
Women EmpowermentHealthy Work EnvironmentEducationHuman Resource ManagementEmployee FlexibilityWorkplace StudyOrganizational BehaviorWork AdjustmentFlexible Work ArrangementGender DisparityGender IdentityGender StudiesFlexible Working PoliciesFlexible WorkingGendered ContextVarying FormsFeminist TheoryWorkforce DevelopmentSociologyFormal FlexibilityGender EconomicsBusinessWorklife BalanceGender DivideSocial PolicyGender Roles
In this article we present empirical data from a research study investigating the implementation of the flexible working policies that emanate from the improving working lives standard in a National Health Service Trust in the UK. We argue that gender is accorded insufficient focus in the literature, considering the barriers that create a take‐up gap in formal flexible working practices. We further argue that gendered perceptions render unworkable attempts to portray flexible working as a gender‐neutral issue and demonstrate that such perceptions mean that formal mechanisms for flexible working continue to be considered to be a women's issue. We present data on informal flexible working mechanisms and suggest that a greater focus on combining these mechanisms with formal flexibility may help provide working time flexibility for a greater proportion of the workforce.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1