Four-day workweek
A four-day workweek is a week that includes four instead of five days per week on which work is done.
Those who support a four-day workweek say that it increases productivity, motivation and satisfaction and decreases electricity consumption and stress because workers have longer weekend breaks.[ 1] [ 2]
References
Critique of work
Terminology and related topics
Forced labour
Four-day workweek
Occupational burnout
Wage slavery
All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy
996 working hour system
Aktion Arbeitsscheu Reich
Autonomism
Bullshit job
Cycle of poverty
Dolce far niente
Effects of overtime
Extermination through labour
Flextime
Uberisation / Gig worker
Karoshi
Money-rich, time-poor
Occupational stress
Orange S.A. suicides
Overwork
Post-work society
Precariat
Protestant work ethic
Refusal of work
Right to rest and leisure
Sampo generation
Six-hour day
Tang ping
Technological unemployment
Work ethic
Workaholic
Working poor
Work–life interface
Historical people Contemporary people
Franco Berardi
L. Susan Brown
Madeleine Bunting
David Graeber
Michael Hardt
Maurizio Lazzarato
Claus Peter Ortlieb
Roland Paulsen
Jeremy Rifkin
Penelope Rosemont
Mark Slouka
Nick Srnicek
Claire Wolfe
John Zerzan
Theater, movies, music and art
Office Space
Swedish Public Freedom Service
"Take This Job and Shove It"
The Future of Work and Death
The Main Thing Is Work!
The Working Class Goes to Heaven
Yama—Attack to Attack
À Nous la Liberté
Literature
Fight Club
Bartleby, the Scrivener
Bullshit Jobs
The Conquest of Bread
Future Primitive and Other Essays
In Praise of Idleness and Other Essays
Inventing the Future
Manifesto Against Work
New Escapologist
On the Poverty of Student Life
The Society of the Spectacle
Steal This Book
The Abolition of Work
The End of Work
The Human Use of Human Beings
The Idler
The Revolution of Everyday Life
The right to be lazy
The Soul at Work: From Alienation to Autonomy
Anekdote zur Senkung der Arbeitsmoral
Bonjour paresse
Communities
R/antiwork
CrimethInc.
Situationist International
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