Rethinking Work in the Digital Era to Protect the Environment and Promote Health
A special issue of International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health (ISSN 1660-4601). This special issue belongs to the section "Digital Health".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 January 2020) | Viewed by 322014
Special Issue Editors
Interests: psychology of sustainability and sustainable development; vulnerable workers and decent work for all; retirement and early retirement; late career development and financial planning, with special reference to women and migrant workers; psychological contract breach and its relationship with other individual and psychosocial variables
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: smart learning environments; teachers’ burnout; emerging technology enhanced educational environments
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
New technologies, digitization, and automation are changing workplace and education environments worldwide. The 4thindustrial revolution is now affecting the ways of doing work, the training of employees, life long learning, the entire organizational structure, and the managers’ and employees’ roles.
The newest work and organizational psychology (WOP) approaches outline both the transition currently taking place in the labor market and its implications for people’s wellbeing and continuous education. As job polarization arises, consisting of services decomposed into low-tech and low-paying vs. high-tech and high-paying jobs, WOP needs to address several concerns. First, how to help those less-qualified workers to better adapt to the changes in the digital era for achieving decent flexible work. Second, how to train people that apply to jobs in growing fields like health, education, and other services, and how to maintain their soft skills needed for in-person services. Third, how to support managers who cope with technology undermining their status, power, and control, for creating value in future work. Moreover, how to promote people to be healthier workers, with greater autonomy and control of their time, combining traditional and independent work with flexible employment, clear boundaries between work and private life, and higher wellbeing (both hedonic and eudemonic). Therefore, the present Special Issue is intended to address the psychosocial processes that underlie these complex and unsettled questions.
Innovative contributions and results of empirical studies that increase our understanding of how the workplace and/or educational settings are changing and how people can embrace emerging forms of work and learning are the focus of this Special issue. Hence, it is open to articles, reviews, case reports, and position papers on these themes.
Prof. Gabriela Topa
Dr. Xuesong Zhai
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- Work psychology
- Organizational Psychology
- The psychological and Social environment
- Smart learning and working environments
- Continuous education for workers in digital era
- Occupational Health promotion
- Prevention of risk factors at work
- Employees wellbeing
- Positive attitudes at work
- Prosocial behavior in groups and organizations
- Healthy organizations
- Smart learning environments and health
- Decent and flexible work
- Quality of working life
- Psychological and social capital
- New management styles
- Psychological and physical Workability
- High-performance work practices
- Engaged workers
- Work-health balance
- Work – life interface
- Employability promotion
- Innovative and intrapreneurial skills
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