Time-use and well-being impacts of travel-to-work and travel-for-work

被引:12
作者
Wheatley, Daniel [1 ]
Bickerton, Craig [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Birmingham, Dept Business & Labour Econ, Birmingham B15 2TT, W Midlands, England
[2] Nottingham Business Sch, Econ Div, Nottingham, England
关键词
highly skilled workers; subjective well-being; time-use; mobile working; travel-for-work; travel-to-work; BUSINESS TRAVEL; SATISFACTION LEVELS; MIDLANDS; MOBILITY; BEHAVIOR; STRESS; GENDER; PLACES;
D O I
10.1111/ntwe.12074
中图分类号
TB18 [人体工程学];
学科分类号
1201 ;
摘要
This article contributes to our understanding of the complex patterns of travel-to-work and travel-for-work which increasingly characterise highly skilled employment, using 2015 data from a UK Midlands study comprising an online survey and follow-up interviews. Travel-to-work essentially lengthens the working day, and is difficult to use productively, especially when commuting by car. Travel-for-work, by contrast, results in intense schedules especially when requiring overnight stays. Ownership of travel-for-work is ambiguous: it is employer driven, and travel time is often spent productively using mobile technologies, but is rarely rewarded with TOIL. While general dissatisfaction is reported with the commute, negative effects of travel-for-work (family, health, reduced leisure time) are mediated by positive impacts including experience of new working cultures, and infrequency of travel. Four factors appear central to the differing well-being impacts: (1) frequency of travel; (2) ability to plan travel; (3) productive use of travel time, and; (4) reciprocal benefits of travel.
引用
收藏
页码:238 / 254
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Subjective well-being related to satisfaction with daily travel
    Bergstad, Cecilia Jakobsson
    Gamble, Amelie
    Garling, Tommy
    Hagman, Olle
    Polk, Merritt
    Ettema, Dick
    Friman, Margareta
    Olsson, Lars E.
    TRANSPORTATION, 2011, 38 (01) : 1 - 15
  • [22] Active travel and subjective well-being in Temuco, Chile
    Paydar, Mohammad
    Fard, Asal Kamani
    JOURNAL OF TRANSPORT GEOGRAPHY, 2025, 123
  • [23] Subjective well-being related to satisfaction with daily travel
    Cecilia Jakobsson Bergstad
    Amelie Gamble
    Tommy Gärling
    Olle Hagman
    Merritt Polk
    Dick Ettema
    Margareta Friman
    Lars E. Olsson
    Transportation, 2011, 38 : 1 - 15
  • [24] More travel, more well-being of older adults? A longitudinal cohort study in China
    Sun, Huiqian
    Jing, Peng
    Wang, Baihui
    Ye, Jie
    Du, Wanru
    Luo, Pan
    JOURNAL OF TRANSPORT & HEALTH, 2023, 32
  • [25] Satisfaction with travel and subjective well-being: Development and test of a measurement tool
    Ettema, Dick
    Garling, Tommy
    Eriksson, Lars
    Friman, Margareta
    Olsson, Lars E.
    Fujii, Satoshi
    TRANSPORTATION RESEARCH PART F-TRAFFIC PSYCHOLOGY AND BEHAVIOUR, 2011, 14 (03) : 167 - 175
  • [26] Towards measures of affective and eudaimonic subjective well-being in the travel domain
    Singleton, Patrick A.
    Clifton, Kelly J.
    TRANSPORTATION, 2021, 48 (01) : 303 - 336
  • [27] Work, Gender, and Sexual Harassment on the Frontlines of Commercial Travel: A Cross-Sectional Study of Flight Crew Well-Being
    Weziak-Bialowolska, Dorota
    Bialowolski, Piotr
    Mordukhovich, Irina
    McNeely, Eileen
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF AEROSPACE PSYCHOLOGY, 2020, 30 (3-4): : 171 - 189
  • [28] The impact of work time control on physicians' sleep and well-being
    Tucker, P.
    Bejerot, E.
    Kecklund, G.
    Aronsson, G.
    Akerstedt, T.
    APPLIED ERGONOMICS, 2015, 47 : 109 - 116
  • [29] Activity travel of population segments grouped by daily time-use: GPS tracking in Halifax, Canada
    Millward, Hugh
    Hafezi, Mohammad Hesam
    Daisy, Naznin Sultana
    TRAVEL BEHAVIOUR AND SOCIETY, 2019, 16 : 161 - 170
  • [30] The work environment, stress and well-being
    Wadsworth, E. J. K.
    Chaplin, K. S.
    Smith, A. P.
    OCCUPATIONAL MEDICINE-OXFORD, 2010, 60 (08): : 635 - 639