Flexible employment, flexible eating and health risks
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Authors
Dixon, Jane
Woodman, Dan
Strazdins, Lyndall
Banwell, Cathy
Broom, Dorothy
Burgess, John
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Volume Title
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Taylor & Francis
Abstract
Over the last 30 years, the risks to public health from working conditions
have subtly shifted in line with new economic regimes, notably the shift
towards contractualist, individualised market driven and ‘flexible’ regulation
of employment associated with the neo-liberal project. Yet, the resulting
transformation in temporal schedules has occurred without due consideration
of potential health impacts. We contend that contemporary employment
policies pose a threat to public health because of their impact on how time is
valued, used and experienced. In particular, time matters for earning an
income and for basic health behaviours, like healthy eating. The sociological
theory of timescapes is used to interpret a qualitative study of food consumption
and labour market engagement practices among three generations of
Australians. We find that wide variability in individual employment schedules
is accompanied by desynchronised social lives and less healthy eating
practices. The research leads us to theorise that employment regimes that are
flexible for employers require workers to live flexible or fluid cultural lives,
disembedded from the temporal structure of previous social rituals, whether
culinary, familial or friendship. The health consequences of this requirement
remain unrecognised by policy-makers.
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Critical Public Health