Managerial resistance to digital workplace surveillance in a local government authority

Kayas, O orcid iconORCID: 0000-0003-4541-8171 and Zamani, ED (2026) Managerial resistance to digital workplace surveillance in a local government authority. Government Information Quarterly, 43 (3). ISSN 0740-624X

[thumbnail of KAYAS-~1.PDF]
Preview
Text
KAYAS-~1.PDF - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.

Download (1MB) | Preview

Abstract

Workplace surveillance is an increasingly pervasive feature of contemporary organisations, yet research overwhelmingly positions employees as its primary subjects and agents of resistance. Managers, by contrast, are implicitly framed as a homogeneous group who design, implement, and sustain surveillance. We argue that such framing ignores the complex positions managers simultaneously occupy as implementers, mediators, and potential subjects of surveillance, and further obscures situations in which they themselves are monitored, oppose surveillance, or actively engage in resisting it. Drawing on a grounded theory study of a UK local government authority, we examine how and why managers resist digitally augmented surveillance systems, revealing three interrelated resistance strategies: shielding employees from surveillance, obfuscating data to undermine system integrity, and deploying discursive practices to contest surveillance legitimacy. These strategies are simultaneously shaped by self-protective and value-driven motivations. By integrating sociotechnical systems theory with public service ethics, we develop a conceptual framework that repositions managers as agentive, morally reasoning actors navigating the contested terrain of digital control. The findings advance interdisciplinary understanding of resistance and ethics in digitally mediated public sector organisations, and respond to calls for research that recognises managerial diversity and conceptualises resistance as a situated sociotechnical process.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: 0806 Information Systems; 0807 Library and Information Studies; Information & Library Sciences; 3503 Business systems in context; 4407 Policy and administration; 4609 Information systems
Subjects: H Social Sciences > HF Commerce > HF5001 Business
H Social Sciences > HD Industries. Land use. Labor > HD28 Management. Industrial Management
T Technology > T Technology (General)
Divisions: Liverpool Business School
Publisher: Elsevier
Date of acceptance: 5 June 2026
Date of first compliant Open Access: 15 June 2026
Date Deposited: 15 Jun 2026 10:08
Last Modified: 15 Jun 2026 10:08
DOI or ID number: 10.1016/j.giq.2026.102162
URI: https://researchonline.ljmu.ac.uk/id/eprint/28844
View Item View Item