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[Commlist] CfP: INDL-5: Features and futures of digital labor
Wed May 11 20:16:15 GMT 2022
*INDL-5: Features and futures of digital labor*
Department of Sociology, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens
Department of Economic and Social Sciences, Telecom Paris, Polytechnic
Institute of Paris
DiPLab (Digital Platform Labor), Telecom Paris, Polytechnic Institute of
Paris
Labor Institute of the General Confederation of Greek Workers
International Labor Organization
The INDL (International Network on Digital Labor) project started as
ENDL (the “E” standing for “European”) 5 years ago with an inaugural
meeting in Paris. Since then, it has expanded internationally, and its
members have organized larger conferences in Paris (2019), Toronto
(2019), Milan (2020, online), and Edinburgh (2021, online). INDL's next
conferencewill take place on November 3-5, 2022 in Athens and will be
the first in-person meeting since the beginning of the Covid-19
pandemic. The network encourages the participation of researchers in all
academic stages and from any part of the world.
*Call for submissions*
The concept of digital labor is central to the digital transformation of
society. New jobs like online freelancing, gig-work, and remote
crowdwork are made possible by digital intermediaries. Under the impetus
of work from home, conventional jobs have changed to teleconferencing
and have introduced algorithmic management.
Despite the pervasiveness of this phenomenon, the notion of digital
labor remains elusive. Different disciplines and fields in the social
and economic sciences, political theory, law, and philosophy have
attempted to capture the attributes of labor in the digital age. These
academic endeavors take place against the backdrop of the rise of
platformization of work and the introduction of new activities that
produce data and meanings for large sociotechnical systems. Thus,
digital labor not only necessitates the transformation of the
traditional concepts and methodologies we employ to study this essential
human activity but also calls for a new understanding of labor relations
to overcome the looming threats of unfair remuneration, job instability,
harsh working conditions, lack of social grounding and, very often,
self-alienation. This conference aims to map these new working
environments by connecting different disciplines and fostering dialogue
around the nature of digital work, as well as the possible futures that
academic research may help bring about.
Place: National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece
Dates: 3-5 November 2022
*Please send your abstract (max. 300 words excluding title) to*:
contact@indl.network <mailto:contact@indl.network>
*Deadline for submission: *15/07/22
*Acceptance notification: *10/08/22
*For registration: *TBA
A non-exhaustive list of topics to be addressed by the conference:
1. New forms of digital labor
a. Atypical work and platforms
b. New types of contracts
c. Digital labor platforms and labor as a service
d. Platformization of remote work
e. Covid-19 and the great “work-from-home experiment”
2. The transformation of the working subject
a. Issues of personal identity (fragmentation, self-alienation)
b. Emergent classes (digital nomads, precariat, cybertariat etc.)
3. Digital labor and economic theory
a. Digital labor and value theory
b. Surveillance as value-producing mechanism
c. Cryptomining and new forms of capital accumulation
d. From commodification to ‘assetization’ of work
5. Digital labor and inequalities
6. Digital labor and the Global Souths
a. Coloniality
b. Global supply networks
c. Migrations
d. Labor arbitrage
e. Global workers’ competition
7. Digital labor and career development
a. What jobs are available to former platform workers?
b. Competency development
c. Formal and informal skills
d. Workforce polarization
e. Platform labor and unemployment/underemployment
8. Organizing digital workers
a. Negotiating the algorithm
b. Unions and platforms
c. Platform cooperativism
d. Global digital activism and platform labor
e. Labor regulations and digital markets
f. Patterns of professional regulation
g. Emerging working subjectivities
*Scientific committee:*
Paola Tubaro (CNRS), Antonio Casilli (Télécom Paris, Polytechnic
Institute of Paris), Clément Le Ludec (Télécom Paris, Polytechnic
Institute of Paris), Milagros Miceli (The DAIR Institute &
Weizenbaum-Institut), Julian Posada (University of Toronto & Yale
University), Uma Rani (International Labor Organization), Manolis
Patiniotis (National and Kapodistrian University of Athens), Iraklis
Vogiatzis (National and Kapodistrian University of Athens), Valia
Aranitou (University of Crete), Christos Goulas (Labor Institute of the
General Confederation of Greek Workers), Manos Spiridakis (University of
the Peloponnese).
**
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