A research agenda for the gig economy and society
著者
書誌事項
A research agenda for the gig economy and society
(Elgar research agendas)
E. Elgar, c2022
- : cased
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注記
Other editors: Ilda Durri, Charalampos Stylogiannis, Mathias Wouters
Includes bibliographical references and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Elgar Research Agendas outline the future of research in a given area. Leading scholars are given the space to explore their subject in provocative ways, and map out the potential directions of travel. They are relevant but also visionary.
Providing a comprehensive, interdisciplinary overview of the gig economy from both a labour and employment perspective, this Research Agenda goes beyond the question of the employment status of platform workers. It investigates how the gig economy is changing the way people work, how the platforms' business models are spreading in our economies, and what labour and social institutions are needed to respond to the challenges that platform work raises.
Covering key issues such as algorithmic management, discrimination, occupational health and safety, casual work and collective labour rights, the authors challenge the narrative that the gig economy is a set of work arrangements that cannot be regulated through existing labour legislation and governance forms. The impact of the gig economy in developing countries and the regulation of global supply changes in platform work are also addressed.
With contributions from world-leading authors, this Research Agenda will be crucial reading for scholars of labour and employment law, sociologists, economists and industrial relations specialists.
目次
Contents:
1 Introduction to A Research Agenda for the Gig
Economy and Society 1
Valerio De Stefano, Ilda Durri, Charalampos
Stylogiannis, Mathias Wouters
2 Exclusion by default: Platform workers' quest for
labour protections 13
Valerio De Stefano, Ilda Durri, Charalampos
Stylogiannis, Mathias Wouters
3 The impact of the gig-economy on occupational
health and safety: Just an occupation hazard? 33
Aude Cefaliello, Cristina Inversi
4 Algorithmic discrimination, the role of GPS, and
the limited scope of EU non-discrimination law 53
Elena Gramano, Miriam Kullmann
5 The law and worker voice in the gig economy 73
Alan Bogg, Ricardo Buendia
6 Platform economy and the risk of in-work
poverty: A research agenda for social security lawyers 93
Paul Schoukens, Alberto Barrio, Eleni De Becker
7 Platform work and precariousness: Low earnings
and limited control of work 113
Iain Campbell
8 On demand work as a legal framework to
understand the gig economy 133
Ruth Dukes
9 Domestic work and the gig economy 149
Natalie Sedacca
10 Is flexibility and autonomy a myth or reality on
taxi platforms? Comparison between traditional
and app-based taxi drivers in developing countries 167
Uma Rani, Nora Gobel, Rishabh Kumar Dhir
11 The emerging geographies of platform labour:
Intensifying trends in global capitalism 193
Kelle Howson, Alessio Bertolini, Srujana Katta,
Funda Ustek-Spilda, Mark Graham
12 Crowdwork and global supply chains: Regulating
digital piecework 215
Nastazja Potocka-Sionek
Index 235
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