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      Situating platform gig economy in the formal subsumption of reproductive labor: Transnational migrant domestic workers and the continuum of exploitation and precarity

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      Capital & Class
      SAGE Publications

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          Abstract

          In conversation with critical platform and labor studies, which tend to focus on drivers and food delivery workers, this article seeks to expand our understanding of the platform gig economy from the perspective of reproductive labor and migrant domestic workers. The exploitation of women’s unpaid and low-paid reproductive work has persisted throughout various stages of capitalist development. Migrant domestic workers’ underpaid reproductive labor becomes an essential site for primitive capital accumulation and the production of the labor force in the contemporary neoliberal global economy. Building upon analyses of the historical and contemporary circumstances of transnational migrant domestic workers in Canada, I argue that digital labor platforms become a technology-enabled, capital-driven force in the larger commodification and exploitation process of migrant workers’ reproductive labor, and such processes are underpinned by entangled structural and institutional forces of the uneven capitalist development, racism, patriarchy, and the state’s discriminatory (im)migration and labor policies. The article suggests that understanding the seeming prevalence of platform work should be situated in the continuous formal subsumption of reproductive labor and the class immobility of migrant domestic workers, and labor activism and movements should contest the entwined power dominations beyond merely demanding regulations over platforms.

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          Most cited references45

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          Neoliberalism as Exception

          Aihwa Ong (2006)
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            Digital labour and development: impacts of global digital labour platforms and the gig economy on worker livelihoods

            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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              Neoliberalism as Creative Destruction

              D Harvey (2007)
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Capital & Class
                Capital & Class
                SAGE Publications
                0309-8168
                2041-0980
                March 2024
                January 12 2023
                March 2024
                : 48
                : 1
                : 119-133
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Simon Fraser University, Canada
                Article
                10.1177/03098168221145407
                923de5d0-7783-4e82-b79a-30e2f1e39f7b
                © 2024

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/

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