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Article

Employee dissent on social media and organizational discipline

Details

Citation

Thompson P, McDonald P & O’Connor P (2020) Employee dissent on social media and organizational discipline. Human Relations, 73 (5), pp. 631-652. https://doi.org/10.1177/0018726719846262

Abstract
What kind of surveillance of employees is evident today? The rights of employers to police and act punitively with regard to workplace dissent and misbehaviour have become contentious legal, policy and ethical issues. Drawing on survey responses from employees in the UK and Australia, this study investigates the scope and scale of employee dissent in relation to critical online comments and the private use of social media during work time. The findings reveal a sufficient pool of misbehaviours, albeit that they are emergent and uneven. Also evident were some apparently contradictory responses with respect to employer rights to profile and discipline, at the same time as asserting employee rights to voice and private online identities. The findings contribute to knowledge of how much and what kinds of online dissent exist in the ambiguous space between the public sphere of work and the private lives of individual employees and what employers do about it.

Keywords
employee misbehaviour; online dissent; public-private boundary; social media and employment; workplace surveillance

Journal
Human Relations: Volume 73, Issue 5

StatusPublished
FundersAustralian Research Council
Publication date01/05/2020
Publication date online06/05/2019
Date accepted by journal14/03/2019
URL
PublisherSAGE Publications
ISSN0018-7267
eISSN1741-282X

People (1)

Professor Paul Thompson

Professor Paul Thompson

Emeritus Professor, Management, Work and Organisation

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