Un 'technical report' della studiosa di fama internazionale
Saskia Sassen; di due anni fa, ma mi sembra comunque interessante
segnalarlo.
juan carlos
Digitization And Work: Potentials and Challenges in Low-Wage
Labor Markets
Saskia Sassen
Columbia University
URL: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/278030782
This report examines the question of the future of work and
technology through two issues. One is how digitization can enhance
the work life of low-income workers by addressing the specific needs
of these workers at their workspace and in their neighborhoods.
Low-wage workers can gain from the development of digitized apps and
tools that address their needs. The high-end worker is already a
full and effective user of these technologies, and in the US, most
digital applications have been geared to the middle classes and
high-end workers and households. Very little has been developed to
meet the needs for low-income workers, their families, and their
neighborhoods. This is a bad and sad state of affairs given the
needs of these workers and families. The data indicate that most of
these workers and their families have access to digital apps, and
are willing to spend some money on acquiring apps. We also know that
access to digital apps is overwhelmingly through their
phones–especially Android phones, rather than through email or
iPhones–which is another constraint that leaves many low-income
potential users of digital apps at a disadvantage. We need more
innovations that meet the needs and constraints of low-wage
workers.1
Against this set of conditions, I focus on how digital innovations
can address the needs of low- wage workers, their families and their
neighborhoods. I will discuss recently developed applications geared
towards low-income people and neighborhoods. But I will also examine
existing or planned applications aimed, whether knowingly or de
facto, at professionals, corporations, or scientists that could be
adapted for use by low-income workers, families, and neighborhoods.
A second major issue I address in this report concerns an emergent
complication that increasingly affects all workers. It derives from
the use of semi-automated systems, which have seen particularly
sharp innovations in the world of work. Such systems can generate
ambiguity about responsibility when something goes wrong insofar as
the worker still has a role in their deployment. In the case of
factory and delivery workers, the increase in the use of robotic
tools and machines can be devastating if something goes wrong since
they probably don't have access to specialized lawyering if the
employer does not pay for it and is in most cases the accused party
anyhow. High-end workers also confront this given the sharp increase
in the use of automated computer transactions of
important/high-value operations that generate a similar ambiguity
regarding responsibility for a mistake. But they are likely to have
access to that specialized lawyering. One helpful source for
in-depth discussion of this ambiguity about responsibility (the
machine or tool versus the worker using it) can be found in a series
of lawsuits: these provide detailed information about how workers
can easily be at the losing end of such lawsuits. But they also make
visible the ambiguities of the work process and the available laws
in establishing who is guilty when something goes wrong. I will
briefly discuss some of these laws uits and related issues.