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[Commlist] CFP: Disrupting Algorithms: Innovating Work and Life in the Digital Economy
Tue Dec 18 22:47:13 GMT 2018
CFP for an open panel at the 4S Conference (Society for Social Studies
of Science, September 2019, New Orleans). Deadline for abstract
submission: February 1, 2019. Apply at
https://www.4s2019.org/accepted-open-panels/
Open panel 37: Disrupting Algorithms: Innovating Work and Life in the
Digital Economy
Alessandro Delfanti, University of Toronto
Yujie Chen, University of Leicester
Work is increasingly shaped by algorithms and automated technologies
that standardize and organize the labor process, incorporate managerial
tasks, and contribute to new forms of value generation. While this is
depicted as a smooth process of innovation, the field is ripe with
frictions and tensions.
Studies on technology and workers have well-documented workers’
resistance to the introduction of new technologies on the shop floor
from manufacturing to call centers. Building on this scholarly
tradition, we aim to discuss how algorithmic power is confronted,
negotiated, and disrupted by workers in today’s booming sectors of
logistics, online crowdwork, or the so-called gig economy. The field of
STS offers crucial concepts and tools to challenge the assumption of
technology as an external force that single-handedly configures and
controls the workforce. STS shed lights on how both the materiality and
ideology of innovation are contested and practiced by specific actors.
We are interested in papers that deal with workers’ creative means of
counteracting algorithmic control, from strikes and refusal to everyday
resistance and coping, as well as new forms of worker-led organizations,
in different geographical, social and cultural contexts. Perspectives
rooted on user theory, political economy of technology, feminist theory
of technology, and labour process theory are welcome among others. We
also aim to solicit papers that document and study how workers alter,
redefine, and regenerate meanings, opportunities, risks, and rewards
other than those imposed by system algorithms and other technologies.
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