The application of managerial policies and practices in multi-sector, multi-occupational, multi-organizational and multi-contextual environments provide significant indications of nature, scale and impacts of organizational and people-level outcomes. While some of the economic impacts of meaningless work practices have been recently researched in Management and Psychology (Bailey et al., 2016), its under exploration led to this special issue, whose aim is to examine the structural, psycho-social and economic contextual dimensions of the impacts of managerial work practices (McCann, 2020; Simandan, 2017), how they are interpreted as meaningless and their impacts on organizational productivity, employees’ psychological safety and well-being, performance, employer – employee relationships, and firm and regional-level sustainability beyond De Bustillo et al. (2011), Baldry et al. (2007) and Fleetwood (2013). Despite previous scholarships’ explorations of meaningful work (Bailey et al., 2016), and an agency-based approach to how meaningless life and work can be (Belanger et al., 2024; Bailey & Madden, 2019), a wider socio-economic approach to studying meaningless work practices within and beyond business environments is lacking. While technological advancements have facilitated faster and sometimes more efficient ways of producing goods and delivering services (Sahoo & Lo, 2022; Popkova et al., 2022) and inclusive economic policies have helped in enhancing meaningful employment in traditional small businesses (Dorasamy & Kikasu, 2024), the exploration of meaningless work practices in non-traditional, manufacturing, and geographically constrained economies is missing.
Recent calls to examine the wider impacts of meaningless work practices in multisectoral contexts (Mercurio, 2020; Martikainen et al., 2022) stop short of addressing people’s lack of performance, productivity, work disengagement and alienation in meaningless work practices contexts (Konuk et al., 2023; Duggal et al., 2023), thereby highlighting an urgent need for a multidisciplinary, multi-sectoral and multidimensional approach. Developing rigorously tested and testable approaches to appropriately conceptualize and address the wider nature, scale and impacts of meaningless work practices in multiple business and regional economies and effectively provide new directions for research, business organizations, regions and policymakers at individual, economic and societal sustainability levels is needed.
This call seeks to progress the structurally centric debates towards deeper psycho-social appreciation, critical understanding, knowledge creation and actionable insights into meaningless work practices at departmental and organizational levels and their wider socio-economic impacts at regional and global levels. Consequently, what businesses, policymakers, practitioners and researchers can do to understand and mitigate non-value-adding/purposeless work is highly needed. This exploration is particularly pertinent given the growing multi-sectoral, dynamic and complex systemic contexts where people’s perceptions of work and non-work engagements as meaninglessness and how the challenges and opportunities are theorized, conceptualized and practically managed are gaining traction (Mendy et al., 2024).
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Author guidelines must be strictly followed. Please see here.
Authors should select (from the drop-down menu) the special issue title at the appropriate step in the submission process, i.e. in response to ““Please select the issue you are submitting to”.
Submitted articles must not have been previously published, nor should they be under consideration for publication anywhere else, while under review for this journal.
Opening date for manuscripts submissions: 02/09/2025
Closing date for manuscripts submission: 02/03/2026
Closing date for abstract submission: 02/12/2025
Email for submissions: [email protected]
John Mendy; Lincoln International Business School, University of Lincoln, UK, [email protected]
Asha Thomas, Department of Operations Research and Business Intelligence, Wrocław University of Science and Technology, Poland; [email protected]