Workplace Erosion reframes modern job‑related decline as a structural phenomenon rather than a personal failure. Drawing on SignalRupture’s theoretical canon — including Infrastructural Exposure Theory, Slow Harm Theory, Systemic Erosion Theory, Social Infrastructure Theory, and the clinical framing of Pathologized Infrastructure — this paper defines Workplace Erosion as the long‑arc thinning of human capacity produced by unstable organizational systems. Instead of treating burnout as an individual collapse, the essay exposes the infrastructural conditions that generate cognitive depletion, emotional bandwidth collapse, and chronic instability. It shows how friction, contradictory demands, acceleration, and bureaucratic delay offload organizational dysfunction onto workers, who become the shock absorbers for systemic incoherence. By naming Workplace Erosion as a diagnostic category, the paper provides a structural, clinical, and temporal framework for understanding how modern work environments degrade human capacity over time — not through dramatic events, but through slow harm delivered by the everyday architecture of the workplace.
Signal Rupture (Mon,) studied this question.