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      Workers organizing in the platform economy: Local forms and global trends of collective action

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          Abstract

          Distinctive features of the on‐demand work platforms made it theoretically improbable for workers to organize and for collective forms of protest to emerge. Their business model and work arrangements spatially isolate and socially individualize workers, subjectivizing them as competing micro‐enterprises rather than co‐workers. However, faced with the flood of the platforms on a global scale, collective actions of platform workers surged like a backwash, especially in the ride‐hailing and food delivery sectors, during the last decade. Observers witnessed a great variety in the combination of actors involved and repertoire of actions mobilized worldwide. Despite this diversity, some common global trends can be sketched out. Through a literature review focused on Europe, Latin America, North America and Asia, this article shows that workers struggle globally to build a collective actor, through an original combination of new and old forms of protest. They ought to compensate for their weak marketplace bargaining power by leveraging their discursive, associational, coalitional and workplace bargaining powers.

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          Most cited references92

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          Forces of Labor

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            Platform labor: on the gendered and racialized exploitation of low-income service work in the ‘on-demand’ economy

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              Riders on the Storm: Workplace Solidarity among Gig Economy Couriers in Italy and the UK

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                Sociology Compass
                Sociology Compass
                Wiley
                1751-9020
                1751-9020
                February 2024
                February 2024
                February 2024
                : 18
                : 2
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Department of Sociology Laval University Quebec City Quebec Canada
                [2 ] Department of Sociology Jeonbuk National University Jeonju Jeollabuk‐do South Korea
                [3 ] Department of Arts, Culture and Media & Faculty of Information University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada
                [4 ] Culture and Communications Federal University of Rio de Janeiro Rio de Janeiro Brazil
                [5 ] Faculty of Human and Social Sciences São Paulo State University Sao Paulo Brazil
                [6 ] School of Social Communication Saint‐Paul University Ottawa Ontario Canada
                [7 ] Department of Sociology University of Montreal Montreal Quebec Canada
                Article
                10.1111/soc4.13188
                f22699d2-14aa-491b-b30e-c7d17474a37e
                © 2024

                http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor

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