Gig Work, Telework, Precarity, and the Pandemic

被引:2
|
作者
Schulz, Jeremy [1 ,5 ]
Robinson, Laura [2 ]
McClain, Noah [3 ]
Reisdorf, Bianca C. [4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Berkeley, Inst Study Societal Issues, Berkeley, CA USA
[2] Santa Clara Univ, Harvard Berkman Klein Ctr, Dept Sociol, Santa Clara, CA USA
[3] Santa Clara Univ, Dept Sociol, Santa Clara, CA USA
[4] Univ N Carolina, Dept Commun Studies, Charlotte, NC USA
[5] Univ Calif Berkeley, Inst Study Societal Issues, 2420 Bowditch St 5670, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA
关键词
platform economy; gig work; remote work; telework; COVID-19;
D O I
10.1177/00027642231155371
中图分类号
B849 [应用心理学];
学科分类号
040203 ;
摘要
This issue examines technology-driven economic developments during the global COVID-19 pandemic in Europe, Asia, and the Americas. Specifically, the articles cover the ways that gig work, the platform economy, and remote work have evolved during the course of the pandemic. The issue leads with articles that chart the interplay of the platform economy with various facets of the pandemic from the inequalities and risks faced by gig workers to market forces shaping the commercialization of hosting platforms. The following articles concentrate on the ways in which specific structural conditions-digital infrastructure as well as the structure of the economy-influence the unequal distribution of telework in Uruguay and the relationship between informality and remote work opportunities across Latin America. The last two articles explore remote work in Asia and North America. In the first of these two articles remote work in Japan is examined in order to investigate the cultural sources of resistance to the adoption of remote work. In the second and concluding article, the remote work preferences of U.S. adults are analyzed as a function of technology usage (videoconferencing versus instant messaging) as well as sociodemographic and occupational attributes.
引用
收藏
页码:955 / 960
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] 'New' terrains of precarity - gig work in India
    Nair, Gayatri
    CONTEMPORARY SOUTH ASIA, 2022, 30 (03) : 388 - 401
  • [2] Work Precarity and Gig Literacies in Online Freelancing
    Sutherland, Will
    Jarrahi, Mohammad Hossein
    Dunn, Michael
    Nelson, Sarah Beth
    WORK EMPLOYMENT AND SOCIETY, 2020, 34 (03) : 457 - 475
  • [3] Yoga and the Gig Economy: Pandemic, Precarity and Yoga Teacher Labour
    Clarke, Marissa
    RELIGIONS OF SOUTH ASIA, 2024, 18 (1-2): : 190 - 214
  • [4] Gangs and the Gig Economy: Triads, Precarity and Illicit Work in Hong Kong
    Fraser, Alistair
    Joe-Laidler, Karen
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF CRIMINOLOGY, 2024, 64 (01): : 139 - 156
  • [5] The effects of the pandemic on gig economy couriers in Argentina and Chile: Precarity, algorithmic control and mobilization
    Gutierrez Crocco, Francisca
    Atzeni, Maurizio
    INTERNATIONAL LABOUR REVIEW, 2022, 161 (03) : 441 - 461
  • [6] Contradictions and Crisis in the World of Work: Informality, Precarity and the Pandemic
    Kesar, Surbhi
    Bhattacharya, Snehashish
    Banerjee, Lopamudra
    DEVELOPMENT AND CHANGE, 2022, 53 (06) : 1254 - 1282
  • [7] Telework and the Boundaries between Family and Work Life during the Pandemic
    Fernandez-Lozano, Irina
    REVISTA ESPANOLA DE INVESTIGACIONES SOCIOLOGICAS, 2023, (182): : 23 - 44
  • [8] Work-Related Stress and Telework in Mexico During the Pandemic
    Robles-Medina, Rosa Elia
    ESTUDIOS DE DERECHO, 2023, 80 (176): : 39 - 54
  • [9] Pandemic precarity
    Cassiman, Ann
    Eriksen, Thomas Hylland
    Meinert, Lotte
    ANTHROPOLOGY TODAY, 2022, 38 (04) : 1 - 2
  • [10] Inequalities in Remote Gig Work During the COVID-19 Pandemic
    Fiers, Floor
    Hargittai, Eszter
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION, 2023, 17 : 4326 - 4345