Re-spatializing Digital Labor 1: New Actors
Type: Virtual Paper
Theme:
Sponsor Group(s):
Digital Geographies Specialty Group
, Socialist and Critical Geography Specialty Group
, Economic Geography Specialty Group
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Start / End Time: 4/11/2021 08:00 AM (Pacific Time (US & Canada)) - 4/11/2021 09:15 AM (Pacific Time (US & Canada))
Room: Virtual 34
Organizer(s):
Ryan Burns
, Luke Bergmann
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Chairs: Ryan Burns
Agenda
Role | Participant |
Presenter | KE LI |
Presenter | Constanza Ulriksen-Moretti Universidad De Chile |
Presenter | Dalton Kamish Simon Fraser University |
Presenter | Ricardo Barbosa University of Calgary |
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Presentation(s), if applicable
KE LI, National University of Singapore; Beyond Algorithmic Control: Flexibility, localized Control, and Paradox in the Decentered Labor Process of the On-Demand Economy |
Constanza Ulriksen-Moretti, Universidad De Chile; Digital mobile workers: exploring new ways of dwelling-in-labour in the Chilean platform economy |
Dalton Kamish, Simon Fraser University; Beyond Digital Labor: Re-theorizing the User/Platform Relation |
Ricardo Barbosa, Clark University; App food-delivery workers in Brazil communicate and interpret their experiences of digital work on social media |
Description
It is now an urgent moment for geographers to revisit how we think of the spaces of digital labor. By now, the platforms mediating and organizing work are well-known, and their implications increasingly theorized. UberEats, Lyft, Didi Chuxing, and Fiverr scaffold the gig economy wherein workers perform ad hoc jobs delegated through the platform; Yelp, Amazon, Baidu, and OpenStreetMap coordinate volunteered data production; and tech workers for major corporations like Google, Apple, Tesla, and Alibaba reshape regional political-economies. The geographies of this digital labor are critical to understanding its social, political, and economic implications, but scholars have primarily made sense of its geographies by engaging narrow conceptions of "space" and "labor" that obscure important relations and processes. Digital labor is often understood to occur within Euclidean geometries, under the premise of remuneration, and through Marxian conceptions of value. At the same time, digital labor discussions often under-theorize immaterial and affective labor, attentional economies, and moral economies. A more planetary view of digital labour would further draw out its uneven geographies -- with geopolitical implications -- and emphasize new empirical imperatives such as diversifying case studies or mobilizing comparative approaches. In short, broadening the purview of what digital labor is and where it happens can challenge some of the conceptual framings that have driven digital labor studies to date.
This session seeks to rethink the spatial frameworks through which geographers grasp work conducted in and through the digital. In turn, we hope to reclaim many forms of (digital) work whose spatialities have occluded them from our attention.
Re-spatializing Digital Labor 1: New Actors
Description
Virtual Paper
Session starts at 4/11/2021 08:00 AM (Pacific Time (US & Canada))
Contact the Primary Organizer
Ryan Burns - ryan.burns1@ucalgary.ca