Nordic working life balance is important in the context of a highly developed welfare state, budget
collaboration between the State and municipalities, and a unified labor movement. In working life
studies, various research perspectives create meaning around and propose solutions for the many
quality issues of modern working life. Welfare research, working environment research, and human
resource management (HRM) research attack the multiple challenges of working life in different
ways and share the overall objective of solving issues in modern working life. Research from
the three perspectives, however, tends to compartmentalize life spheres. They conceptualize the
modern working person as an individual, employee, or citizen, neglecting the complexity of lived life
where all three spheres blur together, which possibly reflects the difficulty of making modern work
life function well. This article is based on a structured literature review of the three main research
perspectives (welfare, working environment, and HRM). We review existing international research,
observing where the three perspectives show overlaps and identify 24 studies which cross-fertilize
in the sense that two or more of the perspectives are applied at the same time in the same study.
Our results show that while the perspectives share a common interest in solving the problems
of the overlapping working life (OWL), they do so with different methods and criteria for success,
and offer different solutions. We propose the concept ?OWL? to analyze how working life studies
create meaning around quality issues of modern working life. OWL?s main focus is the multiple
challenges faced by working people who are simultaneously individuals, citizens, and employees.
We arrive at two main cross-disciplinary themes: boundary and quality. The boundary theme
reflects an approach to solving the issues of modern working life through improvements of the
working life balance. The quality theme reflects an approach to solving issues in modern working
life by addressing quality of work, preventing stress, burnout, etc. The review only finds three studies
which try to encompass all three life spheres (employee, citizen, and employee), and even when
the research perspectives are cross-fertilized, knowledge of possible effects of cross-fertilization is sparse. We propose further research in initiatives aiming at improving the complementing and
supplementing of the three perspectives especially with regard to facilitation of families with small
children, an intensified focus on inclusive workplaces, and a higher degree of correlation between
HRM, working environment, and welfare policies.
Author Biographies
Stine Jacobsen, National Research Centre for the Working Environment
PhD Student
Pia Bramming, Aarhus University ? Faculty of Arts
Associate Professor
Helle Holt, Danish National Centre for Social Research