In recent years, the increasing process of digitization has gradually blurred the boundaries between work and private life. Therefore, new issues concerning workers’ protection arose. One of the main topics on this matter is related to employees’ tendency to utilize technological devices, as smartphones and tablets, to remain “connected” to their job outside ordinary business hours. In relation to this aspect, the paper addresses the debate and juridical solutions proposed and developed in France, through the Loi El Khomri, and in Italy, with the law No. 81/2017 recently approved by Parliament, to introduce a right (and/or an obligation) to disconnect in favour of digitized employees, and in order to protect workers’ private life, preventing diseases related to risk of burnout and the augmentation of stress. Furthermore, the analysis will be focused on the social debate related to the abovementioned topic. In particular, it will concern the positions assumed on this matter by main workers’ and employers’ organizations of the said countries, and their reactions to the initiatives undertaken by legislators, in order to realize a first evaluation concerning the impact of the solutions proposed. Afterwards, the attention will be cantered on praxis and tools introduced by collective agreements, in order to verify whether social partners have been able to find more efficient methods to balance work and private life, than the ones suggested by legislators. The outcome of the paper is referred to the actions that ILO could assume, on the base of the experience developed in France and in Italy, to address the future global issue of protecting employees’ work-life balance.

Right to disconnect: French and Italian proposals for a global issue / M. Avogaro. - In: REVISTA BRASILEIRA DE PREVIDÊNCIA. - ISSN 2317-0158. - 2018:1(2018 Jan), pp. 97-115. (Intervento presentato al 5. convegno Conference of the Regulating for Decent Work Network tenutosi a Geneva nel 2017).

Right to disconnect: French and Italian proposals for a global issue

M. Avogaro
2018

Abstract

In recent years, the increasing process of digitization has gradually blurred the boundaries between work and private life. Therefore, new issues concerning workers’ protection arose. One of the main topics on this matter is related to employees’ tendency to utilize technological devices, as smartphones and tablets, to remain “connected” to their job outside ordinary business hours. In relation to this aspect, the paper addresses the debate and juridical solutions proposed and developed in France, through the Loi El Khomri, and in Italy, with the law No. 81/2017 recently approved by Parliament, to introduce a right (and/or an obligation) to disconnect in favour of digitized employees, and in order to protect workers’ private life, preventing diseases related to risk of burnout and the augmentation of stress. Furthermore, the analysis will be focused on the social debate related to the abovementioned topic. In particular, it will concern the positions assumed on this matter by main workers’ and employers’ organizations of the said countries, and their reactions to the initiatives undertaken by legislators, in order to realize a first evaluation concerning the impact of the solutions proposed. Afterwards, the attention will be cantered on praxis and tools introduced by collective agreements, in order to verify whether social partners have been able to find more efficient methods to balance work and private life, than the ones suggested by legislators. The outcome of the paper is referred to the actions that ILO could assume, on the base of the experience developed in France and in Italy, to address the future global issue of protecting employees’ work-life balance.
Digitization; right to disconnect; work-life balance; smart working; collective bargaining.
Settore IUS/07 - Diritto del Lavoro
gen-2018
International Labour Organization
Centre for Employment and Labour Relations Law - University of Melbourne, Australia
School of Social Sciences - Jawaharlal Nehru University, India
Durham Law School (DLS) - University of Durham, UK
Fairness at Work Research Centre (FairWRC) - University of Manchester, UK
Amsterdam Institute for Advanced Labour Studies (AIAS) - University of Amsterdam, Netherlands
Institute for Applied Economic Research (IPEA) - Brasilia, Brazil
Institut Arbeit und Qualifikation (IAQ) - University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany
Korea Labor Institute (KLI) - Seoul, Korea
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/525088
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