Blog

10 June 2020

Platform Economy

Migration and Migrant Labour in the Gig Economy: An Intervention

In urban gig economies around the world, platform labour is predominantly migrant labour. Yet the academic literature on the intersection of the gig economy and labour migration remains scant. Our experience with two action research projects, spanning six cities on four continents, has taught us how platform work impacts the structural vulnerability of migrant workers. This leads us to two claims that should recalibrate the gig economy research agenda. First, we argue that platform labour simultaneously degrades working conditions while offering migrants much-needed opportunities to improve their livelihoods. Second, we contend that the reclassification of gig workers as employees is by itself not sufficient to counter the precarisation of migrant gig work. Instead, we need ambitious policies at the intersection of immigration, social welfare, and employment regulation that push back against the digitally mediated commodification of migrant labour worldwide.

by Fabian Ferrari, Mark Graham, Niels Van Doorn
Oxford Internet Institute, University Of Amsterdam
Gig Economy, Labour Policy, Migrant Workers, Migration, Regulation, Social Protection, Social Welfare

About the Author / Organization

Fabian Ferrari

Mark Graham

Niels van Doorn

Oxford Internet Institute

University of Amsterdam

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