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An Empirical Assessment of the Intrusiveness and Reasonableness of Emerging Work Surveillance Technologies in the Public Sector
- Source :
- Public Administration Review
- Publication Year :
- 2020
- Publisher :
- Wiley, 2020.
-
Abstract
- As public sector work environments continue to embrace the digital governance revolution, questions of work surveillance practices and its relationship to performance management continue to evolve, but even more dramatically in the contemporary period of many public servants being forced to shift to remote work from home in response to the COVID‐19 pandemic This article presents the results of three surveys, two of them population‐based survey experiments, all conducted during the onset of the COVID‐19 pandemic in Canada that compare public servant (n = 346) and citizen (n = 1,008 phone;n = 2,001 web) attitudes to various cutting‐edge—though no doubt controversial among some—digital surveillance tools that can be used in the public sector to monitor employee work patterns, often targeted toward remote working conditions The findings represent data that can help governments and public service associations navigate difficult questions of reasonable privacy intrusions in an increasing digitally connected workforce Evidence for PracticeNew work surveillance technologies are available to use within the public sector and will present acceptability challenges to public managers as they contemplate the introduction of these technologies Multimodal survey data from Canada reveals that public servants and citizens find these emerging work surveillance technologies to be quite intrusive and unreasonable but show relatively more tolerance for digital surveillance over physical surveillance practices Understanding surveillance anxieties among targeted employees will be key to finding a balance between employee privacy rights and employer desires to manage employees in a remote or digital environment
- Subjects :
- Marketing
education.field_of_study
Intrusiveness
Public Administration
Sociology and Political Science
Performance management
business.industry
05 social sciences
Public sector
Population
Public relations
0506 political science
Work (electrical)
0502 economics and business
Workforce
050602 political science & public administration
Survey data collection
Public service
Business
education
050203 business & management
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15406210 and 00333352
- Volume :
- 80
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Public Administration Review
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....7ad68a89898c60f5796bcacc03e1e5c9