Work.Work.Work.

Work Futures Hallmark Research Initiative
Work.Work.Work.

Hosted by Dr Peter Ghin, Work.Work.Work. expertly guides you through people's lived experience of the modern workplace. We explore the way work is changing, and more importantly, how people are experiencing those changes. And we're not just talking about major technological shifts, but the nitty gritty, day to day stuff that can make our work a labor of love, and sometimes not so much with the love.  Our research collective represents disciplines as diverse as law, computer sciences, human geography, sociology, indigenous leadership and organization studies. We’re an eclectic bunch, and we hope that our diversity of thinking will bring you a different take on not only what the future of work looks like, but what it feels like to be a worker in an employment landscape that has never felt more filled with possibilities and so terrifyingly dystopian at the same time.  In our first season, we'll be looking at the legacy effects of the pandemic on the way we work. We’ll be talking to people about how the pandemic changed the way we dressed for work, what the post pandemic landscape looks like for young people, and how COVID-19 and specifically long-COVID has shone a spotlight on a previously overlooked category of workers, that is people living and working with long term health conditions.  For more information visit https://www.work-futures.org/podcasts

Episodes

  1. Energy limiting health conditions: The unspoken energy crisis plaguing workers

    07/17/2023

    Energy limiting health conditions: The unspoken energy crisis plaguing workers

    Are you exhausted? Well join the club! But imagine if that exhaustion wasn’t only a by-product of living in our modern times, but a physiological response to a multi-systemic illness that severely curtails your baseline energy levels. In today’s episode, we explore the world of chronic illness, particularly conditions like long-COVID, fibromyalgia, lupus, and ME/CFS, to better understand their impact on people’s capacity to work.  We discuss the inadequacy of terms like ‘fatigue’ or ‘exhaustion’ to describe the experience of working and living with what one of our guests has termed ‘energy limiting conditions’, and what we think about as the great unnamed energy crisis of our time. We also discuss how organisations can create inclusive workplaces that are welcoming for employees of varying capacities and abilities.  Host: Dr Peter Ghin Guests: Catherine Hale: Head of Consulting, Astrid/Founder, Chronic Illness Inclusion Dr Jo Ingold: Associate Professor, Management, Deakin University Ilena: Managing Director, start up Mentioned: 2023: The state of the future of work  Astriid Energy impairment and disability inclusion How flexible hiring could improve business performance and living standards The business leaders hiding chronic illness  Subscribe to Work.Work.Work. Work Futures Hallmark Research Initiative If you would like to suggest ideas for future episodes or reach out to us, please email work-futures@unimelb.edu.au  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    35 min
  2. Sweatpants. Check! Half-mullet. Check!: The casualisation of workwear in the age of remote working

    07/03/2023

    Sweatpants. Check! Half-mullet. Check!: The casualisation of workwear in the age of remote working

    Have you found yourself shunning tight-fitting clothing since the pandemic? Are you spending your entire working life in ‘athleisure’ wear? For many people, particularly remote workers, the pandemic was a time when the home became a place of online work, virtual education, and tech-mediated socialisation. And our wardrobes adapted to the lockdown era with comfort favouring formality. In this episode, we explore the complexities of fashion and grooming during the pandemic and into COVID normal. With my guests, we discuss the legacy effects of the pandemic on workwear and the increasing trend toward casualisation. We also do a deep dive into the gendered dimension of virtual work and question the extent to which the workwear casualisation movement has had an emancipatory effect for women.  Host: Dr Peter Ghin Guests Dr Briony Lipton: Visiting Research Fellow, ANZSOG (ANU Crawford School); Postdoctoral Research Associate, University of Sydney Business School Sulagna Basu: PhD Candidate, University of Sydney Dr Sophie Lea: Lecturer in Counselling, Monash University, Co-Founder/Director of Kind Schools Dr Harriette Richards: Lecturer Fashion Enterprise, RMIT.  Mentioned: Covid Casual: Refashioning professional attire in the age of remote working: The Beauty Salon Project Fashioning founders: Dress and gender in the entrepreneurial ecosystem Critical Fashion Studies Podcast Subscribe to Work.Work.Work. Work Futures Hallmark Research Initiative If you would like to suggest ideas for future episodes or reach out to us, please email work-futures@unimelb.edu.au  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    34 min

About

Hosted by Dr Peter Ghin, Work.Work.Work. expertly guides you through people's lived experience of the modern workplace. We explore the way work is changing, and more importantly, how people are experiencing those changes. And we're not just talking about major technological shifts, but the nitty gritty, day to day stuff that can make our work a labor of love, and sometimes not so much with the love.  Our research collective represents disciplines as diverse as law, computer sciences, human geography, sociology, indigenous leadership and organization studies. We’re an eclectic bunch, and we hope that our diversity of thinking will bring you a different take on not only what the future of work looks like, but what it feels like to be a worker in an employment landscape that has never felt more filled with possibilities and so terrifyingly dystopian at the same time.  In our first season, we'll be looking at the legacy effects of the pandemic on the way we work. We’ll be talking to people about how the pandemic changed the way we dressed for work, what the post pandemic landscape looks like for young people, and how COVID-19 and specifically long-COVID has shone a spotlight on a previously overlooked category of workers, that is people living and working with long term health conditions.  For more information visit https://www.work-futures.org/podcasts

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