Towards a feminist understanding of digital platform work
By: Clara Punzi
Potential Business Impact:
Fixes unfairness for online workers.
The rapid growth of the digital platform economy is transforming labor markets, offering new employment opportunities with promises of flexibility and accessibility. However, these benefits often come at the expense of increased economic exploitation, occupational segregation, and deteriorating working conditions. Research highlights that algorithmic management disproportionately impacts marginalized groups, reinforcing gendered and racial inequalities while deepening power imbalances within capitalist systems. This study seeks to elucidate the complex nature of digital platform work by drawing on feminist theories that have historically scrutinized and contested the structures of power within society, especially in the workplace. It presents a framework focused on four key dimensions to lay a foundation for future research: (i) precarity and exploitation, (ii) surveillance and control, (iii) blurring employment boundaries, and (iv) colonial legacies. It advocates for participatory research, transparency in platform governance, and structural changes to promote more equitable conditions for digital platform workers.
Similar Papers
Gender and Careers in Platform-Mediated Work: A Longitudinal Study of Online Freelancers
Human-Computer Interaction
Helps women freelancers earn fairly on online jobs.
Digital Labor: Challenges, Ethical Insights, and Implications
Human-Computer Interaction
Helps AI workers get paid fairly.
A Feminist Account of Intersectional Algorithmic Fairness
Computers and Society
Makes computer fairness consider all people's struggles.