This article investigates the experiences of employees and managers in Swedish companies that
offshore IT services to India, focusing on how implementation of offshoring is changing the work
organization and working conditions for software developers onsite. Our analysis highlights the fact
that the working conditions have been significantly redesigned in several different ways because
of offshoring, most obviously due to the need for knowledge transfer between the onshore and the
offshore working sites. The study illustrates how employees and managers onsite utilized different
strategies for knowledge transfer and how these strategies were more or less successful, sometimes
due to resistance from employees. The article concludes that, although offshoring contributed to a
separation of conception from execution in these companies, there were few signs of routinization
of daily work tasks for onsite employees. Instead, it was the routinized and noncore tasks that were
offshored while project management tasks were taken over by onsite staff, which meant that they
ended up in a superior position vis-?-vis their Indian colleagues as new global hierarchies were
created. Power relations at work, both within firms and between firms, are thus brought to light.
Author Biographies
Martha Blomqvist, Centre for Gender Research, Uppsala University
Associate Professor, Senior Researcher
Helen Peterson, Department of Sociology and Work Science, University of Gothenburg
Associate Professor, Senior Lecturer
Sunrita Dhar-Bhattacharjee, Lord Ashcroft International Business School, Anglia Ruskin University