Work-Life Inclusion: Broadening perspectives across the life-course

Author:   Krystal Wilkinson (Manchester Metropolitan University, UK) ,  Helen Woolnough (Equans Regeneration and Energy Services, UK)
Publisher:   Emerald Publishing Limited
ISBN:  

9781803822204


Pages:   216
Publication Date:   05 February 2024
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Work-Life Inclusion: Broadening perspectives across the life-course


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Overview

Examining a range of under-explored work-life interface issues as they affect different stages of a worker’s life, the authors share new insights into complex issues that affect us all. Topics explored include the wellbeing of students who work, solo-living staff, those on complex fertility journeys, perinatal mental health, chronic illness, menopause, and retirement. Work-Life Inclusion: Broadening perspectives across the life-course will be primarily useful for two main audiences: 1) Academics and students in the fields of work and employment, gender studies, and those interested in health and wellbeing 2) People management practitioners and employers.

Full Product Details

Author:   Krystal Wilkinson (Manchester Metropolitan University, UK) ,  Helen Woolnough (Equans Regeneration and Energy Services, UK)
Publisher:   Emerald Publishing Limited
Imprint:   Emerald Publishing Limited
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.40cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.393kg
ISBN:  

9781803822204


ISBN 10:   1803822201
Pages:   216
Publication Date:   05 February 2024
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1. Introduction: Exploring the Under-Explored; Krystal Wilkinson and Helen Woolnough Chapter 2. Work-Life Balance and Social Class; Samantha Evans and Madeleine Wyatt Chapter 3. Parallel Lives: Exploring the Experiences of Students Who Work; Marilena Antoniadou, Mark Crowder, and Eileen Cunningham Chapter 4. Empowering Generation Z: Achieving a Healthy Work-Life Interface; Fabio Rizzi, Jérôme Chabanne-Rive, and Marc Valax Chapter 5. Questing the Work-Life Challenges Faced by Solo-Living Women Academics: Can There Be a “Life” for Us?; Grace Gao, Linna Sai, and Mengyi Xu Chapter 6. Navigating Fertility Treatment Alongside Work and Employment: The Work-Fertility Interface; Krystal Wilkinson and Clare Mumford Chapter 7. The Intersect of Miscarriage and Work: Concealment, Minimisation and Discriminatory Practice; Katy Schnitzler Chapter 8. Perinatal Mental Health and Employment: Exploring the Work-Illness Intersection in the Context of UK Policing; Krystal Wilkinson, Sarah-Jane Lennie, and Keely Duddin Chapter 9. Are Training Opportunities Another Work-Life Challenge?: The Experiences of Combining Apprenticeship Training with Working Split Shifts in Hospitality Roles; Gail Hebson and Clare Mumford Chapter 10. Managing Work and Life with an Unseen Chronic Illness; Humera Manzoor Chapter 11. Muted Voices of Invisible Men: The Impact of Male Childlessness; Robin A. Hadley Chapter 12. Menopause and Workplace Well-being; Carol Atkinson, Fiona Carmichael, and Jo Duberley Chapter 13. Ageing and Work-Life Complexities in Retirement; Katrina Pritchard, Rebecca Whiting, and Cara Reed Chapter 14. Ageing Migrants' Work-Life Interface across 'Transnational' Life-Courses; Sajia Ferdous Chapter 15. Conclusion; Helen Woolnough and Krystal Wilkinson

Reviews

This book will be a very valuable tool to help HR professionals and organisations to take their health and wellbeing strategy to the next level. To optimise its impact, a strategy should be based on the health risks and needs of its workforce throughout the employee ‘life course’. The CIPD fully supports the notion that employers need to consider the whole person if they are to be effective in reducing work-life conflict and supporting their health and wellbeing as they journey through work and life. The book provides an excellent narrative of how this needs to include the multidimensional nature of people’s identity and experiences. The different chapters cover a range of key life-stage events, such as menopause transition, that individuals can encounter through the employee lifecycle and which can understandably impact on health and work. The book is a welcome clarion call to breakdown the silence and taboo that persists in many workplaces around broader wellbeing issues that affect so many, so that people can receive empathy, support and understanding. -- Rachel Suff, Senior Policy Advisor, CIPD I am delighted to provide an endorsement for this handbook edited by Dr Krystal Wilkinson and Dr Helen Woolnough. Through a series of well-informed empirical chapters, they respond to the call to broaden understandings of the work-life interface to consider a range of challenges for different groups across the life-course. Many of the chapters highlight topics that have previously been underexplored in work-life literatures, and are highly topical, such as social class in Chapter 2, the earliest stages of working lives (Chapter 3 and 4) solo-living for women (Chapter 5), menopause (Chapter 12), apprenticeship (Chapter 9) and male perspectives on parenthood (Chapter 11). The ground-breaking work is carried in the middle of the book with chapters 6 to 8 on topics that are historically missing from academic agendas; bound by the development of theory on the connection between fertility treatment, miscarriage and perinatal mental illness respectively. These chapters successful illuminate silenced and taboo topics, bringing them into mainstream workplace narratives to the benefit of readers. Strength and depth are added by intersectional empirical studies with reflections on work-life complexities from older workers (Chapter 13), ethnic minority female workers that manage chronic illness (Chapter 10) and older ethnic workers (Chapter 14). Taken as a whole, authors draw on a range of theoretical frames and lenses including the work-life interface; equality, diversity and inclusion, career theory, empowerment, training and wellbeing. The book is pitched to appeal to both academics and practitioners through its accessible credible approach. The style is provocative and critical; it challenges our assumptions as researchers or organisation practitioners to think creatively and be more work-life inclusive. All chapters conclude with implications for practice. Thanks to insightful guidance and analysis from Drs. Wilkinson and Woolnough, their book plants a stake in the sand that others in the field will need to observe. -- Professor Carol Woodhams, Professor of Human Resource Management, Surrey Business School: Taking an inclusive approach to the work-life issues employees face at different stages of the life-course should be part of an organization’s overarching inclusion strategy. This book is a welcome step forwards in deepening our understanding of the multi-faceted nature of people’s lived experiences of the work-life interface. Feeling included at work has a positive impact on employees’ engagement, productivity and wellbeing. This book is a call to action for organisations to go further in cultivating inclusive cultures by shining a light on some of the under-explored and ‘hidden’ issues employees face when navigating their working life and personal experiences. A highly informative and valuable read which will help readers think more creatively about how people experience the work-life interface. -- Craig Oddy, Head of Talent and People Experience, Novuna Financial Services


Author Information

Dr Krystal Wilkinson is Reader (Associate Professor) in Human Resource Management at Manchester Metropolitan University, UK. She is a Chartered Member of the CIPD and worked in a range of operational HR roles prior to moving into academia. Dr Helen Woolnough is Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Senior Manager, Equans, UK and Ireland. She is a Chartered Psychologist (CPsychol) and Associate Fellow of the British Psychological Society (AFBPsS). Helen worked in numerous academic roles before moving into organisational practice.

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