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'There is no sick leave at the university': how sick leave constructs the good employee.

Authors :
Jaye, Chrystal
Noller, Geoff
Richard, Lauralie
Amos, Claire
Source :
Anthropology & Medicine; Dec 2021, Vol. 28 Issue 4, p461-476, 16p, 1 Chart
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

This paper examines the role of sick leave in constructing the identity of a good worker. The setting is a public funded New Zealand university. Within a qualitative research design, interviews were conducted with a range of employees and managers about their use and management of sick leave. Sick leave entitlements, use, and management encompass moral discourses that impact upon worker identity. Normalising discourses generated by compliance to bureaucratic demands and norms of productivity and performance in the neoliberalised workplace are constitutive to the construct of the good employee as reflected by the appropriate use and recording of sick leave. Conversely, the respectful, authentic, compliant and productive worker is constitutive of its opposite – the difficult employee. The construct of the difficult employee positions conformity and self-management of sick leave as strong moral imperatives. Managers were generally supportive of workers' efforts to self-manage sick leave with consideration for university commitments and were flexible around work hours, but this would in turn position them as deviant to institutional pathways of managing sick leave, with tensions between humanistic and authoritarian management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13648470
Volume :
28
Issue :
4
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Anthropology & Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
154318737
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/13648470.2020.1814988