Travailler pour son « temps de repos » ?

Originally programmed as an exception in the law, working 12 hour shifts has been expanding in the public hospital sector for several years now, often at the behest of care workers themselves, and more and more services and professions are concerned by the phenomenon. Far from being marginal, the 12...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Fanny Vincent
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: ADR Temporalités 2015-02-01
Series:Temporalités
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/temporalites/2896
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1846130991705358336
author Fanny Vincent
author_facet Fanny Vincent
author_sort Fanny Vincent
collection DOAJ
description Originally programmed as an exception in the law, working 12 hour shifts has been expanding in the public hospital sector for several years now, often at the behest of care workers themselves, and more and more services and professions are concerned by the phenomenon. Far from being marginal, the 12 hour shift seems today to represent a way for stressed care workers to claim the right to rest and take control of their own time.Taking off from an ethnographic survey carried out for an ongoing thesis in the services of several hospitals, and about forty interviews, this article analyses how care workers use and take advantage of the 12-hour system in terms of what they feel it offers with respect to their social time. It thus suggests interpreting care workers’ investment in the 12-hour system as a means toward social emancipation, in that it appears to them – compared to the other sorts of systems such as the 8-hour shift – as a chance to find a balance between their time at work and time off-work, and to regulate the place that work occupies in their existence. In that sense, and given the mainly female composition of the paramedical population, the article studies in particular the significance of the time liberated by the 12-hour system in the light of motherhood.
format Article
id doaj-art-e40c2a6edd2e45c4b5292152ee320ee9
institution Kabale University
issn 1777-9006
2102-5878
language fra
publishDate 2015-02-01
publisher ADR Temporalités
record_format Article
series Temporalités
spelling doaj-art-e40c2a6edd2e45c4b5292152ee320ee92024-12-09T15:57:21ZfraADR TemporalitésTemporalités1777-90062102-58782015-02-012010.4000/temporalites.2896Travailler pour son « temps de repos » ?Fanny VincentOriginally programmed as an exception in the law, working 12 hour shifts has been expanding in the public hospital sector for several years now, often at the behest of care workers themselves, and more and more services and professions are concerned by the phenomenon. Far from being marginal, the 12 hour shift seems today to represent a way for stressed care workers to claim the right to rest and take control of their own time.Taking off from an ethnographic survey carried out for an ongoing thesis in the services of several hospitals, and about forty interviews, this article analyses how care workers use and take advantage of the 12-hour system in terms of what they feel it offers with respect to their social time. It thus suggests interpreting care workers’ investment in the 12-hour system as a means toward social emancipation, in that it appears to them – compared to the other sorts of systems such as the 8-hour shift – as a chance to find a balance between their time at work and time off-work, and to regulate the place that work occupies in their existence. In that sense, and given the mainly female composition of the paramedical population, the article studies in particular the significance of the time liberated by the 12-hour system in the light of motherhood.https://journals.openedition.org/temporalites/2896working time12-hour systempublic hospitalfree timetime-offarrangements
spellingShingle Fanny Vincent
Travailler pour son « temps de repos » ?
Temporalités
working time
12-hour system
public hospital
free time
time-off
arrangements
title Travailler pour son « temps de repos » ?
title_full Travailler pour son « temps de repos » ?
title_fullStr Travailler pour son « temps de repos » ?
title_full_unstemmed Travailler pour son « temps de repos » ?
title_short Travailler pour son « temps de repos » ?
title_sort travailler pour son temps de repos
topic working time
12-hour system
public hospital
free time
time-off
arrangements
url https://journals.openedition.org/temporalites/2896
work_keys_str_mv AT fannyvincent travaillerpoursontempsderepos