‘We are all just prisoners here of our own device’: The moral challenge of balancing technology, work and capitalistic pursuits
Abstract
Although technological proliferation is a reality in a 4IR world, and has immense potential to
increase the efficiency and quality of work, it is accompanied by workplace practices that there
is no benchmark for. These practices have the potential to unsettle traditional work routines,
traditional work/non-work boundaries, and to disturb peoples’ work life balance irreparably.
Against this backdrop, this paper explores the parameters of morally acceptable organisational
practices in terms of usage and expectations of ICT’s. Through adopting a Critical scholarly
stance, this paper dialectically investigates the nature of work and the importance people
associate with it, the ways in which technology impacts work and peoples’ lives, and uncovers
how technology enables control over labour in a capitalist society. The effect the current
technological explosion has been far reaching and is effecting every sphere of life. As we try to
make sense of 4IR, we are also redefining our different contexts and the role technology and
ICT play in each of these. We are noticing a definite blurring of spaces that, not too long ago,
had distinct parameters.
Collections
- TD: 2021 Volume 17 [42]