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Journal Article

Citation

Malachowski C, Boydell KM, Kirsh B. Int. J. Sociol. Soc. Policy 2018; 38(5/6): 346-359.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Emerald Group Publishing)

DOI

10.1108/IJSSP-04-2017-0050

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

PURPOSE

The purpose of this paper is to make visible the ways in which peoples' experiences of mental ill health are coordinated and produced in the workplace setting.

Design/methodology/approach

This institutional ethnography draws from data collected from 16 informants in one Canadian industrial manufacturing plant to explicate how texts organize activities and align worker consciousness and actions with company expectations of a "bona fide" illness.

Findings

The findings demonstrate how a "bona fide" illness is textually mediated by biomedical and physical work restrictions, thus creating a significant disjuncture between an experiential and ruling perspective of mental ill health.

Research limitations/implications

The work of employees living with self-reported depression becomes organized locally and translocally around the discourse of "mental illness is an illness like any other." This presents a profound disjuncture between the embodied experience of being too unwell to mentally perform work duties, and the textually coordinated practices of what it means to access sick time for a "bona fide illness" within a biomedical-based attendance management protocol.

Originality/value

The current study adds to the literature by shedding light on the disjuncture created between the embodied experience of mental health issues and the ruling perspective of what constitutes a bona fide illness, adding a unique focus on how people's use of attendance management-related supports in the workplace.

Keywords:
Organizational structure, Sociology of work, Institutional ethnography, Workplace mental health

© Emerald Publishing Limited 2018

Keywords

Institutional ethnography; Organizational structure; Sociology of work; Workplace mental health

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