Work Archives - Positive News Good journalism about good things Wed, 03 Jan 2024 13:06:25 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://www.positive.news/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/cropped-P.N_Icon_Navy-32x32.png Work Archives - Positive News 32 32 The rise of job centres for neurodivergent people https://www.positive.news/society/job-centres-for-neurodivergent-autistic-people/ Wed, 03 Jan 2024 08:58:10 +0000 https://www.positive.news/?p=465473 Increasingly, specialised employment agencies are drawing attention to the benefits of conditions such as autism

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Revealed: the best companies to work for in 2023 https://www.positive.news/lifestyle/the-best-companies-to-work-for-2023/ Mon, 17 Jul 2023 13:37:21 +0000 https://www.positive.news/?p=441606 An annual ranking of organisations has revealed the best purpose-led firms to work for – and many have vacancies

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The results of the world’s largest four-day week trial are in – and it’s good news https://www.positive.news/society/the-results-of-the-worlds-largest-four-day-week-trial-are-in/ Tue, 21 Feb 2023 11:07:53 +0000 https://www.positive.news/?p=424939 The pilot has been described as a ‘breakthrough moment’ in the campaign to send the four-day week mainstream

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Sitting all day is terrible for you, but there’s an easy way to counteract it https://www.positive.news/lifestyle/wellbeing/sitting-all-day-is-terrible-for-you-but-theres-an-easy-way-to-counteract-it/ Wed, 18 Jan 2023 10:45:04 +0000 https://www.positive.news/?p=421386 A simple hack could help you avoid the negative health implications of sitting down all day, according to a study

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What went right this week: a ‘major breakthrough’ for forests, plus more https://www.positive.news/society/positive-news-stories-from-week-49-of-2022/ Thu, 08 Dec 2022 17:36:48 +0000 https://www.positive.news/?p=414647 The EU moved to halt deforestation, working less was found to boost business, and France banned domestic flights, plus more

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Four-day week: study shows working less boosts wellbeing and productivity https://www.positive.news/economics/four-day-week-trial-wellbeing-and-productivity/ Mon, 05 Dec 2022 13:24:26 +0000 https://www.positive.news/?p=413918 The results of one of the largest four-day week trials are in. The verdict? It's good news for employers and their staff

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What went right this week: a bold work experiment, plus more positive news https://www.positive.news/society/positive-news-stories-from-week-23-of-2022/ Thu, 09 Jun 2022 15:36:59 +0000 https://www.positive.news/?p=394010 The world’s largest four-day week trial began, solar-powered bikes arrived, and Finland set a climate benchmark, plus more

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The best cities for work-life balance, according to researchers https://www.positive.news/society/the-best-cities-for-work-life-balance/ Wed, 08 Jun 2022 08:00:36 +0000 https://www.positive.news/?p=393805 Generous holiday allowance, parental leave and mental health support for workers helped Oslo top the ranking

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Work less, live more: 10 arguments for a shorter working week https://www.positive.news/economics/10-arguments-shorter-working-week/ https://www.positive.news/economics/10-arguments-shorter-working-week/#comments Wed, 01 Jun 2022 14:31:18 +0000 https://www.positive.news/?p=26638 As UK firms trial a four-day week, we look at the benefits of working less, from strengthening families to improving equality

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From strengthening economies and family life, to improving gender equality and democracy, 10 ways a shorter working week could benefit us

As one of our all-time most popular articles Work less, play more explored, recent years have seen a mindset shift around work-life balance. More people seem to be questioning whether traditional working patterns truly serve us. Author Douglas Coupland recently described the nine to five as “barbaric”.

Dutch author and journalist Rutger Bregman is among those advocating a shorter working week. “For some of us the line is blurred between work and what we love, so our lives wouldn’t change much,” he told Positive News last year. “But for many, there is a clear distinction between what’s work and the rest of life.

“A poll last year in the UK asked people whether they found their jobs meaningful – 37 per cent said no. I think we need to work less in certain jobs in order to do more of what matters and what is meaningful and important to society.”


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At the beginning of 2017, a Swedish trial of a six-hour working day came to a close. Despite failing to convince everyone, those behind the trial said its benefits outweighed the costs. Daniel Bernmar, a politician who helped bring about the experiment at a retirement home in Gothenburg, told Positive News that the results presented “the complete opposite narrative of the need to work more and to work harder”.

The New Economics Foundation (NEF) has long supported the concept of shorter working weeks. Here, principal fellow at the thinktank, Anna Coote, suggests 10 reasons why it could be good for society.

1. A smaller carbon footprint

Countries with shorter average hours tend to have a smaller ecological footprint. As a nation, the UK is currently consuming well beyond its share of natural resource. Moving out of the fast lane would take us away from the convenience-led consumption that is damaging our environment, and leave time for living more sustainably.

2. A stronger economy

If handled properly, a move towards a shorter working week would improve social and economic equality, easing our dependence on debt-fuelled growth – key ingredients of a robust economy. It would be competitive, too: the Netherlands and Germany have shorter work weeks than Britain and the US, yet their economies are as strong or stronger.

3. Better employees

Those who work less tend to be more productive hour for hour than those regularly pushing themselves beyond the 40 hours per week point. They are less prone to sickness and absenteeism and make up a more stable and committed workforce.

4. Lower unemployment

Average working hours may have spiralled, but they are not spread equally across our economy – just as some find themselves working all hours of the day and night, others struggle to find work at all. A shorter working week would help to redistribute paid and unpaid time more evenly across the population.

5. Improved wellbeing

Giving everybody more time to spend as they choose would greatly reduce stress levels and improve overall wellbeing, as well as mental and physical health. Working less would help us all move away from the current path of living to work, working to earn and earning to consume. It would help us all to reflect on and appreciate the things that we truly value in life.

6. More equality between men and women

Women currently spend more time than men doing unpaid work. Moving towards a shorter working week as the ‘norm’ would help change attitudes about gender roles, promote more equal shares of paid and unpaid work, and help revalue jobs traditionally associated with women’s work.

7. Higher quality, affordable childcare

The high demand for childcare stems partly from a culture of long working hours which has spiralled out of control. A shorter working week would help mothers and fathers better balance their time, reducing the costs of full-time childcare. As well as bringing down the cost of childcare, working fewer hours would give parents more time to spend with their children. This opportunity for more activities, experiences and two-way teaching and learning would have benefits for mothers and fathers, as well as their children.

8. More time for families, friends and neighbours

Spending less time in paid work would enable us to spend more time with and care for each other – our parents, children, friends and neighbours – and to value and strengthen all the relationships that make our lives worthwhile and help to build a stronger society.

9. Making more of later life

A shorter and more flexible working week could make the transition from employment to retirement much smoother, spread over a longer period of time. People could reduce their hours gradually over a decade or more. Shifting suddenly from long hours to no hours of paid work can be traumatic, often causing illness and early death.

10. A stronger democracy

We’d all have more time to participate in local activities, to find out what’s going on around us, to engage in politics, locally and nationally, to ask questions and to campaign for change.

The original version of the 10 reasons section of this article was first published by the New Economics Foundation.


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The school that shortened its working week (and what happened next) https://www.positive.news/society/education/the-school-that-shortened-its-working-week-and-what-happened-next/ Thu, 14 Apr 2022 15:14:18 +0000 https://www.positive.news/?p=390439 Amid growing interest in shorter working weeks, a school that rejigged its timetable is now looking to further adapt its week

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