Private Eyes, They See Your Every Move: Workplace Surveillance and Worker Well-Being

Author:

Glavin Paul1,Bierman Alex2,Schieman Scott3

Affiliation:

1. McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada

2. University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada

3. University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada

Abstract

Despite a surge in the number of organizations using surveillance technology to monitor their workers, understanding of the health impacts of these technologies in the broader working population is limited. The current study addresses this omission using a novel measure of an individual’s overall perception of workplace surveillance, which enables it to be asked of all workers, rather than only those in specific occupations or work contexts that have historically been vulnerable to electronic performance monitoring. Structural equation modeling analyses based on a national sample of Canadian workers ( N = 3,508) reveal that surveillance perceptions are indirectly associated with increased psychological distress and lower job satisfaction through stress proliferation. Findings demonstrate that the negative consequences of surveillance are explained by its positive association with three secondary work stressors: job pressures, reduced autonomy, and privacy violations. In the case of psychological distress, these stressors fully mediate a positive association with surveillance. The relationship between surveillance and job satisfaction is more complex, however, with the indirect effects of stress proliferation balanced out by a positive direct effect of surveillance on satisfaction. These results support the use of a stress process framework to examine how surveillance impacts worker well-being through stress proliferation.

Funder

University of Toronto COVID-19 Action Initiative

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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