CONCEPT
The Organizational Boundary Responsibility
The structural obligation of employers, educators, and policymakers to reassume the boundary-maintenance costs that have been transferred — over decades of 'flexibility' — to individual knowledge workers who cannot bear them alone.
For most of the twentieth century, institutions maintained work-home boundaries on behalf of workers. The factory whistle ended the day. The office closed. The commute forced the transition. These structures were ugly, controlling, and not designed with worker well-being in mind — but they performed essential boundary labor, at zero cost to the individual. The transition from industrial to knowledge work has been, in structural terms, the progressive transfer of this labor from institutions to individuals, under the banner of flexibility and autonomy. AI completes the transfer. The knowledge worker of 2026 operates in an environment that provides zero institutional boundary support, with the entire cost of boundary maintenance falling on a single person with a finite willpower reservoir. The prescription: institutions must reassume the burden, not by restoring the factory whistle but by building new forms of temporal structure, communicative restraint, and workload governance appropriate to the AI age.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The transfer proceeded in stages. The
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