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Public investment in electricity generation – a hot-button issue in Queensland?

  • Written by: John Quiggin, Professor, School of Economics, The University of Queensland

One of the most striking features of the Queensland election campaign is that all major parties are advocating public investment in electricity generation.

The real choice to be made is whether this investment will promote the goal of a decarbonised energy system, or whether it will seek to delay this transition and prolong Australia’s...

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Citizenship crisis claims Nick Xenophon Team's Kakoschke-Moore

  • Written by: Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra

Nick Xenophon Team senator Skye Kakoschke-Moore has resigned from parliament after being advised she is a British citizen via her mother, in another blow to the party.

The NXT has three Senate spots, as well as one member in the House of Representatives, Rebekha Sharkie – whose future is under a cloud in the citizenship crisis.

A tearful...

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Why good design alone won't attract millennials to your company

  • Written by: Libby Sander, Assistant Professor of Organisational Behaviour, Bond Business School, Bond University

Many Australian companies are embracing funky new design features that maximise relaxation and homely chill zones in an effort to lure highly skilled professionals. While these features certainly hold appeal, most workers are looking for more than just neat design when they choose their ideal workplace.

Consulting firm Accenture recently made the news after installing a “Zen room” in its Melbourne offices to attract millennials to its workforce. Designed so that employees can take time out to relax, meditate or think through problems, the space is fitted out with hanging pod chairs, couches and a fireplace. Technology is banned.

And Accenture is not alone. Google has sleep pods and fish tank relaxation rooms with massage chairs in its Sydney office. A hammock chair, indoor gardens, mini-golf, pool tables and even in-house bowling alleys are increasingly common fixtures.

Research shows that these types of spaces can accelerate recovery from cognitive fatigue as well as reducing stress. While not new, quiet spaces or relaxation rooms are intended to enhance well-being, increase engagement and improve performance.

Workplace engagement is a significant issue for employers, with levels of engagement continuing to fall. Studies have shown that only 28% of millennials are engaged at work.

At the same time, work-related stress continues to rise. Up to 49% of Australian employees are estimated to be stressed and distracted at work, costing employers more than A$10 billion per year.

image Google’s offices in Sydney. AAP

Work stress is serious business

The consequences of work stress are of significant public interest because of their association with ill health, including cardiovascular disease and mental illness. Employers continue to experiment with workplace design, as it plays a powerful role in influencing stress. Alterations to design, materials and layout can have both positive and negative outcomes.

Open-plan offices have been a prevalent feature of workplaces for decades. Now more and more companies plan to implement hot-desking environments, where employees have no fixed desk. Research on open-plan environments has conclusively shown that employees struggle to perform effectively due to issues with noise, interruptions, distraction and loss of privacy. If you are interrupted, it can take up to 23 minutes to regain focus on the task.

One employee I spoke with during a workplace study commented that they had counted being interrupted 80 times in one morning. The interruptions had included an impromptu birthday morning tea in the workstations a few feet away, two colleagues having a stand-up argument, and another employee conducting a loud conference call on speakerphone in the open work area.

While it might seem like a folly, the design of relaxation or “zen rooms” has arisen in response to these and other challenges of modern workplace design and work. The photos of the relaxation spaces shown here have both an aesthetically pleasing and a domestic feel, designed to make employees feel relaxed and at home.

image The Sydney office of Dropbox is designed to have the feel of an Australian living room. Dropbox supplied

When work feels like home

Creating workplaces that don’t feel like offices is gaining popularity. Dropbox’s new Sydney’s office is intentionally designed to appear like an “Australian living room”. But is there any science behind the ideas, and is it likely to make any difference to recruits?

New research has shown that workplaces specifically designed to be aesthetically pleasing and beautiful led to increased levels of trust among new employees who perceived the employer to be more trustworthy as a result. Additionally, the higher levels of trust went on to predict coworker ratings of learning behaviour.

The use of natural materials such as wood and stone, rather than concrete and laminates, has been shown to increase creativity. Additionally, the same study showed that the use of cool colours and attractive details was helpful to creativity.

The benefits of the inclusion of indoor plants and/or views of greenery are supported by evidence showing that exposure to nature resulted in decreased heart rate, blood pressure and cortisol, a stress hormone. Another study showed that workplace greenery improved perceptions of air quality, concentration, satisfaction and productivity.

image Another view of the ‘living-room-like’ Sydney office of Dropbox. Dropbox supplied

Relaxation spaces, often closed off from the wider office and fitted with relaxing furniture and good acoustics, address the key complaint of modern workplaces – noise.

Both single-talker and multi-talker distractions in open-plan offices result in higher levels of distraction and lower cognitive performance, according to research, as well as increased levels of annoyance and mental workload.

A key advantage of relaxation spaces are that employees are able to control noise and distraction. The ability of employees to exercise personal control over elements of the environment appears to mediate some of the negative effects.

Lighting levels, access to attractive views such as art, feature installations such as fireplaces, and proximity to windows have been shown to have direct positive physical effects.

image The PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) offices in Melbourne. Supplied

Cool office design just one factor among many

While these examples show that the workplace itself is important, there are broader drivers of interest to job-seekers and millennials in particular.

A recent study by Gallup highlighted that opportunities to learn and grow, quality of the individual manager and management overall, interest in the work, and opportunities for advancement were ranked in the top 5 by millennials, gen X and baby boomers.

Empirical research has supported these findings, showing that interesting and flexible work along with good relationships with supervisors and colleagues were rated most important for millennials.

Though millennials seek work-life balance, time flexibility is only one aspect of a flexible environment. Millennials also seek flexibility in terms of employment with different types of contracts, role flexibility and flexibility with location.

Organisations seeking to increase loyalty need to ensure they are balancing attractive workplaces and flexibility with effective management and growth opportunities.

Authors: Libby Sander, Assistant Professor of Organisational Behaviour, Bond Business School, Bond University

Read more http://theconversation.com/why-good-design-alone-wont-attract-millennials-to-your-company-87505

Protecting religious freedoms is a matter of balance, says head of Turnbull's inquiry

  • Written by: Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra

Former Howard government minister Philip Ruddock, appointed by Malcolm Turnbull on Wednesday to do a “stocktake” of Australia’s religious freedoms and protections, warns that the issues do not lend themselves to “black-and-white solutions”.

“I want to identify how we protect religious freedom in a way...

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  2. Which square is bigger? Honeybees see visual illusions like humans do
  3. Infographic: here's exactly what Adani's Carmichael mine means for Queensland
  4. Curious Kids: Why are fern leaves shaped the way they are, and are all ferns identical?
  5. Why scientific monitoring of the effects of industry on our priceless WA rock art is inadequate
  6. Young Australians will wear the costs of Turnbull's middle income tax cut
  7. Foreign ownership of housing – how do Australia and New Zealand compare?
  8. We're drafting a legal guide to war in space. Hopefully we'll never need to use it
  9. Standardised tests are culturally biased against rural students
  10. Will microdermabrasion or skin needling give me better skin?
  11. Do we need a new offence to protect victims of family violence from psychological harm?
  12. Turnbull wants to take middle income earners' income tax both up and down
  13. Research Check: will a coffee a day really keep heart attacks at bay?
  14. What's Australia made of? Geologically, it depends on the state you're in
  15. The concept of 'western civilisation' is past its use-by date in university humanities departments
  16. New Zealand experience shows same-sex marriage could provide huge economic boost for Australia
  17. 'Finkel's new energy report' isn't new and it isn't by Finkel
  18. Facts sink glib housing supply mantra – the focus must be on affordable rental
  19. English test for international students isn't new, just more standardised
  20. There's some evidence lithium protects from dementia, but not enough to put it in drinking water
  21. What is the impact of 'impact investing'?
  22. Income tax relief on Turnbull's agenda
  23. When you're on the defensive, stepping backwards can send a bad signal
  24. Coming soon to a highway near you: truck platooning
  25. The future of plastics: reusing the bad and encouraging the good
  26. Del Kathryn Barton explores powerful female sexuality but reproduces the male gaze
  27. Explainer: how is the price of medicine decided in Australia?
  28. Jelena Dokic's story of abuse shows links between elite sport and child labour
  29. Universities need to rethink policy on student-staff relationships
  30. Why New Zealand can't outsource employment policy to its central bank
  31. Contradictory polls in Queensland, while the Greens storm Northcote in Victoria
  32. Most young Australians can’t identify fake news online
  33. Delhi suffers second smog crisis in 12 months, as wake-up calls go unheeded
  34. Four reasons the Australian government should consider litigation against tobacco companies
  35. When the US locked up white Australian immigrants like Australia does to asylum seekers
  36. Three charts on: how emotional and economic abuse go hand-in-hand
  37. Can a tech company build a city? Ask Google
  38. Five reasons India, China and other nations plan to travel to the Moon
  39. Why the fashion industry keeps failing to fix labour exploitation
  40. Going overboard on religious protections could come back to bite in multicultural Australia
  41. Bennelong polls: Galaxy 50-50, ReachTEL 53-47 to Liberal
  42. It's too soon to celebrate a narrowing gender wage gap
  43. Don Dale royal commission demands sweeping change – is there political will to make it happen?
  44. VIDEO: Michelle Grattan on the same-sex marriage ballot result
  45. Plague outbreak: where does it still exist and could it spread?
  46. Step up Australia, we need a traffic cop in space
  47. From Lord of the Rings to Crocodile Dundee – franchising Australian culture?
  48. Three charts on: what's going on at Manus Island
  49. It's unrealistic to expect MPs to follow the view of the people who elected them every time
  50. A Robert De Niro Theory of Post-Truth: ‘Are you talking to me?’

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