Work–life boundary management and the personal digital assistant
- 1 March 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Human Relations
- Vol. 60 (3) , 519-551
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0018726707076698
Abstract
New mobile information and communication technologies are of special interest to researchers seeking to understand the problematic of boundaries between work and personal-life. This study examines how workers used and interpreted the personal digital assistant (PDA) as a boundary management resource. Using a protocol that combined structured, closed-ended questions with open-ended questions, 42 users were interviewed. The data were analyzed to examine individuals' practices in using this technology, the interpretive resources they drew upon, and the ways in which the spirit of the device's design intersected with their practices and interpretations. Results suggest that the spirit of the device is control, and that users interpreted their technological practices as expressions of personal agency, using the PDA to control the work—life boundary through both integration and segmentation of work and personal-life.Keywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- Special Issue IntroductionJournal of Applied Communication Research, 2004
- ‘You Can Checkout Anytime, but You Can Never Leave’: Spatial Boundaries in a High Commitment OrganizationHuman Relations, 2004
- Boundaries and Role Conflict When Work and Family are Colocated: A Communication Network and Symbolic Interaction ApproachHuman Relations, 2004
- Conclusion: making meaning of mobiles – a theory ofApparatgeistPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,2002
- Mobile phone consumption and concepts of personhoodPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,2002
- Work-Nonwork Conflict and the Phenomenology of TimeWork and Occupations, 2001
- Work/Family Border Theory: A New Theory of Work/Family BalanceHuman Relations, 2000
- The Time BindWorkingUSA, 1997
- Gaining a VoiceManagement Communication Quarterly, 1994
- Remote mothering and the parallel shift: Women meet the cellular telephoneCritical Studies in Mass Communication, 1993