“The System Sucks”: Computer Programs and Technical Control in Entry-Level White-Collar Work
“The System Sucks”: Computer Programs and Technical Control in Entry-Level White-Collar Work
Corey Moss-Pech
TLDR
It is shown how technical control transforms gendered disparities in work tasks into gender inequality in workplace experiences and that work has become less autonomous higher up the occupational hierarchy than most researchers observe.
Abstract
Researchers often examine how technology controls the labor of precarious workers while demonstrating the limits of technology on controlling professional workers. Drawing on a subset of 46 in-depth interviews pulled from a larger sample, I uncover how technical control operates in entry-level office work. Technical control takes one of two forms. First, workers conduct all their tasks in a computer program. I call this task-oriented technical control. Second, workers must log all their offline work into a computer program. I call this social-oriented technical control. The types of jobs controlled by the latter are often done by women and are jobs where control routinizes social interaction. Social-oriented technical control is also experienced more negatively than task-oriented technical control. I therefore show how technical control transforms gendered disparities in work tasks into gender inequality in workplace experiences. I also expose that work has become less autonomous higher up the occupational hierarchy than most researchers observe.

