Tips for Job Hunting in Today's Market
Essay by review • March 9, 2011 • Essay • 333 Words (2 Pages) • 1,425 Views
Persuasive Essay Topic CheckPoint
Employee Privacy Rights in the Workplace
Employees are becoming more concerned about their privacy as their employers are monitoring them electronically more closely than ever before. At the same time, certain state efforts to prevent employee electronic monitoring are not succeeding.
A survey by the American Management Association shows that about 78% of companies in the U.S. monitor their employees in some way.
Some states have attempted to protect employee privacy in the workplace. Despite concerns and some state setbacks, it is important to recognize that employers give some valid reasons for some employee monitoring.
More than 75% of companies say that monitoring helps them combat personal use of the Internet during business hours.
After Sept. 11, employers more than ever want to make sure that employees are not engaging in any type of criminal activity in the workplace. Workers still have legitimate concerns that their privacy rights might be invaded. Employers should develop more effective business equipment policies.
Surveillance technology is being built into the work place. Some employers argue that workplace surveillance is essential for security, safety, and productivity. Employers argue that they have a right to ensure that they "get what they pay for" and that the workplace is a place of "work" and nothing more. The individual call for workplace privacy seems illegitimate in a way where the 'personal' is almost excluded. Paper I want to argue that the private and public view is not useful in the confines of workplace surveillance since it always seems possible to argue that the workplace is only public and is leaving the employee without help to defend their claim. The claim of workplace privacy is not a claim for some personal space, but a claim for the protection against the gaze of their employer into their personal lives. Someone needs to develop a different approach to the issues at hand. I will argue that the invasion of privacy rights and surveillance rights is a matter of organizational injustice.
References:
USA Today
Internet
wtoc.com
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