Digital labour and development: impacts of global digital labour
platforms and the gig economy on worker livelihoods
Mark Graham, Isis Hjorth, Vili Lehdonvirta
First Published March 16, 2017 Research Article
Abstract
As ever more policy-makers, governments and organisations turn to
the gig economy and digital labour as an economic development
strategy to bring jobs to places that need them, it becomes
important to understand better how this might influence the
livelihoods of workers. Drawing on a multi-year study with digital
workers in Sub-Saharan Africa and South-east Asia, this article
highlights four key concerns for workers: bargaining power, economic
inclusion, intermediated value chains, and upgrading. The article
shows that although there are important and tangible benefits for a
range of workers, there are also a range of risks and costs that
unduly affect the livelihoods of digital workers. Building on those
concerns, it then concludes with a reflection on four broad
strategies – certification schemes, organising digital workers,
regulatory strategies and democratic control of online labour
platforms – that could be employed to improve conditions and
livelihoods for digital workers.
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Continua qui:
http://journals.sagepub.com/eprint/3FMTvCNPJ4SkhW9tgpWP/full