Abstract :
Call centres have, over the past decade, become a central element in the way information
services are produced and delivered to the public. Much as automobile factories or textile
mills were treated as both objects of curiosity and as metaphors for their age, call centres
have garnered attention both in their own right as a new means of organizing particular
types of work and as an important venue from which to undertake the study of other
elements of management practice, including human resource management. This paper
critically examines all aspects of research that has been undertaken on call centres, from the
publication of the first novel pieces of research up to the most recent contributions. A good
deal of effort has gone into classifying call centres, comparing the organization of work in
them with other types of work and considering the extent of variation between call centres.
Depending upon the theoretical lens that is used (e.g. labour process theory, highperformance
work systems theory, HR perspectives, gender theory, etc.) different aspects
of call-centre work are emphasized and different conclusions regarding call-centre
employment and its possibilities are reached. These contrasting results are compared and
evaluated in this review. It is also the case that the study of call centres invites critical
reflection upon theories of management, and this is also entered into in this paper.
Additionally, the continuous spread of call centres into new realms of professional work
activity and into new spaces of the global economy throws up challenges that are brought
to the reader’s attention for our understanding of this approach to managing informational
work.