Whom Does Remote Work Make Happy? The Digital Divide in Remote Workers' Well-Being.

IF 5.4 3区 材料科学 Q2 CHEMISTRY, PHYSICAL ACS Applied Energy Materials Pub Date : 2024-08-01 Epub Date: 2024-06-25 DOI:10.1089/cyber.2023.0744
Jennifer Ihm, Yunjin Kim, Chul-Joo Lee
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Abstract

The global shift to remote work during the COVID-19 pandemic has intensified scholarly attention to remote workers' well-being. Although existing studies explore the varied impacts of remote work, there is a gap in understanding remote workers' well-being through the lenses of social disparity and the digital divide. Extending digital divide scholarship to the remote work context, this study disentangles why some remote workers experience better well-being than others. We conducted a two-wave longitudinal panel study in South Korea during the COVID-19 pandemic (Wave 1: February 2021, Wave 2: October 2021). Among the 501 participants who participated in both waves, we found that individuals with lower education levels were less likely to have remote work opportunities. We focused our further analyses on a subset of 144 employees who had remote work opportunities within organizations with typical hierarchical structures. We found that socioeconomic status (SES) did not directly influence remote workers' well-being but indirectly influenced it by contributing to the diversity in using information and communication technologies (ICTs). Workers with higher SES or more diversity in using ICTs demonstrated lower vulnerability and more effectiveness in maintaining their well-being in virtual organizational communication situations. This study highlights social disparities in remote workers' well-being, which arise from the complex interplay of SES either indirectly influencing the diversity in ICT usage or interacting with virtual organizational communication satisfaction and duration. This study advances remote work scholarship by restructuring theoretical discussions on social stratification and the digital divide reproduced within the evolving work environment.

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远程工作让谁快乐?远程工作者幸福感中的数字鸿沟》。
在 COVID-19 大流行期间,全球向远程工作的转变加强了学者们对远程工作者福祉的关注。尽管现有研究探讨了远程工作的各种影响,但在通过社会差距和数字鸿沟的视角来理解远程工作者的福祉方面还存在差距。本研究将数字鸿沟的学术研究扩展到远程工作的背景下,分析了为什么一些远程工作者的幸福感要好于其他人。在 COVID-19 大流行期间,我们在韩国进行了两波纵向小组研究(第一波:2021 年 2 月,第二波:2021 年 10 月)。在参与这两波研究的 501 名参与者中,我们发现教育水平较低的人较少有机会从事远程工作。我们将进一步分析的重点放在 144 名员工的子集上,这些员工在具有典型等级结构的组织中拥有远程工作机会。我们发现,社会经济地位(SES)并不直接影响远程工作人员的幸福感,而是通过促进信息和通信技术(ICTs)使用的多样性来间接影响其幸福感。社会经济地位较高或在使用信息与传播技术方面更具多样性的工人在虚拟组织交流环境中表现出较低的脆弱性,并能更有效地保持其幸福感。这项研究凸显了远程工作者幸福感方面的社会差异,这种差异是由社会经济地位间接影响信息和通信技术使用多样性或与虚拟组织沟通满意度和持续时间相互作用的复杂相互作用所造成的。本研究通过重构关于社会分层和数字鸿沟在不断变化的工作环境中的再现的理论讨论,推动了远程工作学术研究的发展。
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来源期刊
ACS Applied Energy Materials
ACS Applied Energy Materials Materials Science-Materials Chemistry
CiteScore
10.30
自引率
6.20%
发文量
1368
期刊介绍: ACS Applied Energy Materials is an interdisciplinary journal publishing original research covering all aspects of materials, engineering, chemistry, physics and biology relevant to energy conversion and storage. The journal is devoted to reports of new and original experimental and theoretical research of an applied nature that integrate knowledge in the areas of materials, engineering, physics, bioscience, and chemistry into important energy applications.
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