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Economic and Industrial Democracy
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Teams without Teamwork? Explaining the Call Centre Paradox

Diane van den Broek

University of Sydney

George Callaghan

Open University

Paul Thompson

University of Strathclyde

Call centres are evidently an inhospitable environment for teams given a work design based on individualized, largely routine work regulated heavily by technology and managerial scripts. The article explores a number of potential explanations for this paradox in the context of comparable case studies from the UK and Australia. The case studies con.rm that teamworking did not exist in any substantive or traditional sense within any of the plants. But it is argued that teams can exist in the absence of teamwork based largely on their normative bene.ts to management and to a much lesser extent team members. Even allowing for this differentiation, only one of the companies had sustained normative objectives and these were only partially successful. The existing sociotechnical design of call centres is not conducive to teams, but this may not be true of other types of service work.

Key Words: call centres • normative control • service work • team dimensions model • teamwork

Economic and Industrial Democracy, Vol. 25, No. 2, 197-218 (2004)
DOI: 10.1177/0143831X04042500


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This article has been cited by other articles:


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D. van den Broek, A. Barnes, and K. Townsend
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K. Townsend
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