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Future of work from everywhere: a systematic review

Urmila Jagadeeswari Itam (Department of OB and HRM, Faculty of Management, Jain University, Bangalore, India)
Uma Warrier (Department of OB and HRM, Faculty of Management, Jain University, Bangalore, India)

International Journal of Manpower

ISSN: 0143-7720

Article publication date: 13 November 2023

Issue publication date: 27 March 2024

776

Abstract

Purpose

Teleworking, working from home and flexible work have gained popularity over the last few years. A shift in policies and practices in the workplace is required owing to the COVID-19 pandemic accelerating current trends in work-from-everywhere (WFE) research. This article presents a systematic literature review of WFE research from 1990 to early 2023 to understand the transformation of the field.

Design/methodology/approach

The Web of Science database was used to conduct this review based on rigorous bibliometric and network analysis techniques. The prominence of the research studied using SPAR-4-SLR and a collection of bibliometric techniques on selected journal articles, reviews and early access articles. Performance and keyword co-occurrence analysis form the premise of cluster analysis. The content analysis of recently published papers revealed the driving and restraining forces that help define and operationalize the concept of WFE.

Findings

The major findings indicate that the five established and accelerated trends from cluster analysis are COVID-19 and the pandemic, telework(ing), remote working, work from home and well-being and productivity. Driving and restraining forces identified through content analysis include technological breakthroughs, work–life integration challenges, inequality in the distribution of jobs, gender, shifts in industry and sector preferences, upskilling and reskilling and many more have been published post-COVID in the restraining forces category of WFE.

Practical implications

A key contribution of this pioneering study of “work from everywhere” is the linking of the bibliometric trends of the past three decades to the influencing and restraining factors during the pandemic. This study illustrates how WFE could be perceived differently post-COVID, which is of great concern to practitioners and future researchers.

Originality/value

A wide range of publications on WFE and multiple synonyms can create confusion if a systematic and effective system does not classify and associate them. This study uses both bibliometric and scientometric analyses in the context of WFE using systematic literature review (SLR) methods.

Keywords

Citation

Itam, U.J. and Warrier, U. (2024), "Future of work from everywhere: a systematic review", International Journal of Manpower, Vol. 45 No. 1, pp. 12-48. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJM-06-2022-0288

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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