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Reshaping the geography of work: Remote worker...
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Reshaping the geography of work: Remote worker migration and regional dynamics in the post-pandemic era

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic altered work patterns in almost all industrialised nations, with a marked increase in remote work. This shift from office-based to home-based work carries far-reaching consequences for workers, communities, regions and nation-states. By decoupling place of residence from place of work, remote work-fuelled migration has the potential to exacerbate or mitigate inequalities and disparities. While researchers have begun investigating the migration dynamics prompted by COVID-19, key questions persist. These include the extent to which new remote work opportunities are fuelling internal migration, the impact of this migration on inequality and prosperity in receiving regions and how remote workers and their households make migration decisions and adapt to their new work-life circumstances. This chapter explores these questions drawing on current literature on internal migration and remote work and discusses their relevance in two countries that have experienced significant growth in remote work during the pandemic: the United Kingdom and Canada.

Authors

MacLeavy J; Mills S; Mazer K; Reuschke D

Book title

Handbook for the Future of Work

Pagination

pp. 299-313

Publication Date

December 26, 2024

DOI

10.4324/9781003327561-33
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