Summary information

Study title

Work After Lockdown, 2020-2021

Creator

Parry, J, University of Southampton
Beigi, M, University of Southampton
Veliziotis, M, University of Southampton
Baruch, Y, University of Southampton
Young, Z, Half the Sky
Bevan, S, Institute for Employment Studies

Study number / PID

855792 (UKDA)

10.5255/UKDA-SN-855792 (DOI)

Data access

Restricted

Series

Not available

Abstract

This dataset consists of primary data from a mixed method longitudinal project: (1) Qualitative data: interviews in 4 case study organisations across three waves. Some transcripts are retracted where interviewees have not provided their permission for anonymised archiving. In wave 1, a combination of leaders, managers and employees without line management responsibiliy are interviewed in each of the 4 organisations. In wave 2, leaders are interviewed in each of the 4 case study organisations. In wave 3, a combination of leaders, managers and employees without line management responsibiliy are interviewed in each of the 4 organisations. Some new interviews are conducted with people have joined organisations over the course of the pandemic. (2) Quantitative data: employee surveys across PST and PAD sectors We conducted two surveys in Wave One. The first went to subjects working in Local Government and the second to subjects working in the legal profession. At the end of each questionnaire respondents were asked to indicate their willingness to participate in a follow-up (Wave Two) survey to capture data on their views, circumstances and preferences several months later. Over 300 respondents from the Local Government population indicated that they would be willing to complete a Wave Two questionnaire, but the overall response from the Wave One survey of subjects working in the legal profession was poor and only a very few from this already small group opted into the Wave Two survey. As a result, the team decided to: • Conduct a Wave Two follow up survey, as planned, among Local Authority respondents; • Discontinue plans for follow up survey among respondents working in the legal profession; • Conduct a second, cross-sectional, survey using the same questionnaire as the Wave Two survey targeted at respondents in both public administration and professional services roles. This represented a pragmatic compromise and that it has meant that our Wave One and Wave...
Read more

Methodology

Data collection period

06/07/2020 - 31/12/2021

Country

United Kingdom

Time dimension

Not available

Analysis unit

Individual
Organization

Universe

Not available

Sampling procedure

Not available

Kind of data

Numeric
Text

Data collection mode

This was a mixed method project, which has focused on 2 sectors where national datasets indicated there is high capacity for working from home: Professional, Scientific and Technical (PST) and Public Administration and Defence (PAD). Together these sectors represent 1 in 7 of all UK jobs. Distinctive components of the research were designed iteratively in relation to one another.(1) Qualitative interviews: 4 organisations were selected to take part in the research: 2 law firms and 2 local authorities. These covered a range of geographical experiences across the UK. In each organisation, around 10 one-to-one qualitative interviews were convened, purposefully sampled, to include a range of (i) leaders (ii) line mangers and (iii) employees without management responsibility. Longitudinal interviews were conducted with participants over the course of 18 months.(2) Employee surveys:A number of employee well-being surveys were conducted over the course of the research: (i) to local authorities and law firms (industries mapping onto the case studies, but a broader range); (ii) a longitudinal follow-up with local authority employees; (iii) a cross-sectional survey with employees from PST and PAD sectors. Sampling for these surveys was achieved via distributing through social media and through our contacts in a range of professional organisations, employers and trade unions.

Funding information

Grant number

ES/V009648/1

Access

Publisher

UK Data Service

Publication year

2023

Terms of data access

The Data Collection is available for download to users registered with the UK Data Service.

Related publications

Not available