ESSENTIAL WORK, INESSENTIAL WORKERS?

Markus Helfen, Rick Delbridge, Andreas Pekarek, Gretchen Purser

Research output: Chapter in Book/Entry/PoemChapter

Abstract

In this chapter, we introduce the topic of essentiality of work, exploring its implications for workers, labour markets, and public policy. The essentiality of work often corresponds in a dialectical way with the precarity of work, raising pressing questions about how societies value and, more pertinently, devalue various types of labour, thereby influencing life chances and societal integration. What we see in the contributions to this volume and the wider evidence is that essential work is typically performed by workers who are treated as expendable, or inessential. We proceed to outline the various contributions from the studies compiled in this volume. These present diverse perspectives on ‘essentiality’ and the experiences of essential workers. Offering a range of new empirical insights, the volume underlines the vitality and lasting relevance of essentiality – both as a concept and in the experience of workers – beyond the pandemic.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Title of host publicationResearch in the Sociology of Work
PublisherEmerald Publishing
Pages1-10
Number of pages10
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 3 2024

Publication series

NameResearch in the Sociology of Work
Volume36
ISSN (Print)0277-2833

Keywords

  • care work
  • emotional labour
  • Essential work
  • essentiality of work
  • inessential workers
  • intersectionality
  • precarity and precarious work settings

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Sociology and Political Science

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