Overview

This unit confronts students with the stark injustices in the contemporary digital world as manifested in phenomena such as the digital divide and the democratic deficit. It provides an overview of the history of the digital world and engages many of the current challenges posed by algorithmic violence, surveillance capitalism, and digital colonialism. While deeply rooted in the present and looking toward the future, the unit also takes students back a few decades the milieux and ideologies that led to the establishment of cyberspace and, later, to the ‘Internet of things’.

Requisites

Prerequisites

50 credit points

Teaching periods
Location
Start and end dates
Last self-enrolment date
Census date
Last withdraw without fail date
Results released date
Semester 1
Location
Hawthorn
Start and end dates
02-March-2026
31-May-2026
Last self-enrolment date
15-March-2026
Census date
31-March-2026
Last withdraw without fail date
21-April-2026
Results released date
07-July-2026

Learning outcomes

Students who successfully complete this unit will be able to:

  • 1. Consider, compare, and contrast the liberating and exploitative dimensions of work
  • 2. Analyse the relationship between work and equality in societies
  • 3. Evaluate how people have shaped societies through their struggles over work
  • 4. Construct a framework that reflects on the ethical, social, legal and political aspects of work

Teaching methods

Hawthorn

Type Hours per week Number of weeks Total (number of hours)
On-campus
Lecture
1.00  8 weeks  8
On-campus
Class
2.00  8 weeks  16
On-campus
Workshop 1
4.00 1 week 4
On-campus
Workshop 2
4.00 1 week 4
Live Online
Workshop 
2.00 4 weeks 8
Specified Activities
Various
2.00 10 weeks  20
Unspecified Activities
Independent Learning
7.5 12 weeks  90
TOTAL     150

Assessment

Type Task Weighting ULO's
Major EssayIndividual 45% 1,2,3,4 
Minor EssayIndividual 30% 1,2,3 
PresentationGroup 25% 1,2,3 

Content

  • The meanings of work
  • Divisions of labour
  • Alienation and control
  • Legislating work
  • Inequality at work
  • Workplace rights
  • Precarious work
  • Graduate Attribute – Communication Skills: Verbal communication
  • Graduate Attribute – Communication Skills: Communicating using different media
  • Graduate Attribute – Digital Literacies: Information literacy

Study resources

Reading materials

A list of reading materials and/or required textbooks will be available in the Unit Outline on Canvas.