Slaves to Technology: Worker control in the surveillance economy

Authors

  • Bama Athreya

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14197/atr.201220155

Keywords:

gig economy, surveillance capitalism, platform work, precarious work, forced labour, labour markets

Abstract

Technology is enabling new forms of coercion and control over workers. While digital platforms for labour markets have been seen as benign or neutral technology, in reality they may enable new forms of worker exploitation. Workers in precarious conditions who seek employment via digital platforms are highly vulnerable to coercion and control via forms of algorithmic manipulation. This manipulation is enabled by information asymmetries, lack of labour protection, and predatory business models. When put together, these deficits create a perfect storm for labour exploitation. This article describes how digital platforms alter traditional labour relations, summarises case data from several existing studies, and details emerging forms of worker control and barriers to worker agency. It explores current definitions of forced labour and whether digital spaces require us to consider a new conceptualisation of what constitutes force, fraud, and coercion. It concludes with a summary of possible responses to these new forms of abuse in the global economy, including alternative models for business and for worker organising.

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Author Biography

Bama Athreya

Bama Athreya, Ph.D. is a Fellow at the Open Society Foundations and at Just Jobs Network. Her Open Society Fellowship is focused on worker agency in the digital economy. Most recently she worked for USAID where she assisted field missions around the world to develop programming to address labour rights, counter-trafficking, and promote women’s economic inclusion. She has developed and led multi-country projects and written and spoken extensively on the rights of working women, on forced and child labour, and on ethical business practices.

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Published

28-09-2020

How to Cite

Athreya, B. (2020). Slaves to Technology: Worker control in the surveillance economy. Anti-Trafficking Review, (15), 82–101. https://doi.org/10.14197/atr.201220155