Remote Work and Reorganization of Household Infrastructure in the Global South: Insights from the Indian Information Technology Industry

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Abstract

Remote work scholarship treats work-from-home as individual adaptation, ignoring how households must reorganize to enable it. This individualistic bias proves particularly problematic for understanding Global South experiences where infrastructure deficits amplify household burdens. Examining 51 Indian IT professionals’ transition to remote work, we reveal how households reorganized across spatial, temporal, technical, surveillance, and emotional dimensions. We theorize “household infrastructure reorganization” as collective household labor enabling remote work, “domestication of organizational infrastructure” as cost transfer from organizations to households, and “infrastructural volatility” as chronic uncertainty shaping remote work. These findings challenge remote work scholarship and reveal geographic inequalities in remote work.
Original languageEnglish
Article numberlbaf052
Number of pages30
JournalJournal of Economic Geography
Early online date20 Nov 2025
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 20 Nov 2025

Acknowledgements

We thank all the participants who shared their voices and experiences, enabling us to develop the insights presented in this paper. We are also grateful to those who helped connect us with them. Our sincere thanks to our research assistants in India—Sowmya Balasubramaniam, Sundara Babu Nagappan, and Ishwarya Thyagarajan—for their invaluable assistance with data collection.

Funding

This research was supported by the UKRI Future Leaders Fellowship awarded to Professor Vivek Soundararajan (Grant Number MR/V021354/1).

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