Deliberately casual? workers' agency, health, and nonstandard employment relations in Australia

Date

2013

Authors

Keuskamp, D.
Mackenzie, C.R.M.
Ziersch, A.M.
Baum, F.E.

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Journal article

Citation

Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, 2013; 55(6):620-627

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Dominic Keuskamp, Catherine R.M. Mackenzie, Anna M. Ziersch and Fran E. Baum

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Abstract

Objective: We explored Australian workers’ experiences of nonstandard employment, how it related to health and well-being, and the role that Bourdieu’s forms of capital (cultural, economic, and social resources) played in underpinning workers’ agency. Methods: Qualitative data from semistructured interviews with 32 causal workers were analyzed on the basis of framework analysis. Results: Most participants were “deliberate casuals” who had chosen casual over permanent employment, with half of that group naming improved health and well-being as motivation. Those with greater access to capital felt more able to exercise choice, whereas those with fewer capital resources felt constrained to be casual. Gendered structures and labor market dynamics were also significant in shaping agency. Conclusions: Access to capital and a buoyant labor market underpinned workers’ agency in Australia, enabling some to gain health and well-being benefits from nonstandard employment.

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Link to a related website: https://dspace.flinders.edu.au/xmlui/bitstream/2328/27528/1/Baum_Deliberately_AM2013.pdf, Open Access via Unpaywall

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© 2013 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. Unauthorized reproduction of this article is prohibited.

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