The Routledge handbook of the gig economy / edited by Immanuel Ness.

Research on the growth of the precarious economy is of significant interest as the economy increasingly becomes dependent on gig work. However, as platform and automated service work has grown, there remains a chasm in understanding the key aspects of digital labour. This handbook presents comprehen...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Routledge international handbooks
TeilnehmendeR:
Year of Publication:2023
Language:English
Series:Routledge international handbooks
Physical Description:1 online resource (xix, 530 p.) :; ill.
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Table of Contents:
  • 1 Introduction
  • PART I Conceptual perspectives and approaches
  • 2 Job instability, precarity, informality, and inequality: labour in the gig economy
  • 3 Inclusion through the platform economy? The 'diverse' crowd as relative surplus populations and the pauperisation of labour
  • 4 Entrepreneurial finance capital and the gig economy
  • 5 The algorithmic surveillance of gig workers: mechanisms and consequences
  • 6 The challenges of total talent management in the gig economy
  • PART II Globalisation, women, and migration in the gig economy
  • 7 (Re)inventing the collective dimension in a 'virtualised' labour market
  • 8 Beyond formality: the informalisation and tertiarisation of labour in the gig economy
  • 9 Feminised work after Fordism: the new precarity
  • 10 Trade unions, women's labour, and the gig economy
  • 11 Liminal precarity and compromised agency: migrant experiences of gig work in Amsterdam, Berlin, and New York City
  • 12 Platforms, labour, and mobility: migration and the gig economy
  • PART III Worker protest and labour organising
  • 13 Worker solidarity among gig and precarious workers
  • 14 Vulnerable food delivery platforms under pressure: protesting couriers seeking 'algorithmic justice' and alternatives
  • 15 New labour formations, precarious workers, and the gig economy: lessons from British indie unions
  • 16 Labour movements, gig economy, and platform capitalism
  • 17 Consumers in the gig economy: resisting or reinforcing precarious work?
  • PART IV Regional dynamics, Global North: Europe and North America
  • 18 Transformations of work in the era of the gig economy: towards a new paradigm of worker autonomy or exploitation?
  • 19 Prop 22 and lessons for gig workers organising against algorithmic management
  • 20 Protecting gig economy workers in EU law: challenges and recent initiatives
  • 21 Falling through the cracks: gig economy and platform work in Central and Eastern Europe
  • 22 Ambivalences of platform work: the gig economy in Germany
  • 23 Russia: quality of employment as a competition factor between gig and traditional economies
  • 24 Australia: labour and the gig economy
  • PART V Regional dynamics, Global South: Asia, Africa, and South America
  • 25 The unfulfilled promise of gig work: unpacking informality and gig work in India
  • 26 Platform economy, techno-nationalism, and gig workers in India
  • 27 The gig economy in China
  • 28 Fictitious autonomy and negotiated consent: gig work in Japan
  • 29 Platform economy and gig work in South Korea: a special focus on Naver and Kakao
  • 30 Class formation and relations among Filipino cloudworkers
  • 31 Divided unionisation: between traditional and digital labour in Indonesia
  • 32 The rise of the gig economy in South Africa: cooperation and conflict in the labor process
  • 33 The gig economy in Kenya's informal transport sector: manifestations, benefits, challenges, and prospects
  • 34 The gig economy and the formation of new platform trade unions in South America
  • Index.