Conditions of Work and Employment Series No. 27
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―classification and legal regime have yet to be defined in labour law‖ (Supiot, 1999, p. 81;
see also Mundlak, 2005).
The regulation of on-call work has, in some settings, been paired with a conception of
the objectives of working time regulation that ties regulation to productivity, by
characterizing working hours as amenable to regulation only when they are fully
productive. Working time and wage laws have always deployed the notion of ―working
time‖ as a proxy for productivity (Supiot, 1999); the ―productivity regulation‖ model
instead precludes periods designated as inactive from the legal notion of working time, and
therefore from the parameters of regulated work. This model has, albeit implicitly, been
injected into legal discourses on working time in recent years, where it has been advanced
to designate periods of work as either productive or non-productive. This classificatory
system has been applied in particular to occupations, most notably in the health sector, that
skirt the binary divide found in working time laws between ―working time‖ and ―rest‖ by
involving periods in which the employee is ―on-call‖ or ―standby‖ rather than engaging in
the productive components of his or her job. The productivity regulation model consigns
working time regulation solely to the realm of paid work, and is therefore in stark contrast
to the alternative work-family/work-life models. The latter, by conceptualizing paid labour
as ―time out of life‖, ground the regulation of working hours in the demands of the periods
conventionally designated as ―rest‖ (McCann, 2004).
Productivity has a long-standing presence in the field of domestic work regulation:
the characterization of domestic work as unproductive in its entirety is a well-documented
driver of its history of legislated exclusion (Cancedda, 2001). While the international
standard-setting exercise confirms the fading influence of this image of domestic labour,
its legacy can be traced in certain of the models designed as part of recent efforts to
regulate domestic work, which differentiate periods of ―inactivity‖ from productive hours.
Complicating this picture is a regulatory technique, apparently of relatively recent
origin, which bifurcates working hours into what have been characterized as ―active‖ and
―inactive‖ periods.
36
This activity/inactivity distinction has been most prominent in the
recent unsuccessful efforts to revise the EU Working Time Directive, in which it was
proposed to permit the extension of hours limits in jobs that involve substantial periods of
―inactivity‖ (European Commission, 2005). This classification has also been mapped onto
domestic work in certain of the regulatory models generated by efforts to formalize the
sector. The French collective agreement on domestic work (
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