-
Platformisation of Domestic Work in India: Report from a Multistakeholder Consultation
-
by
Tasneem Mewa
—
published
Feb 17, 2020
—
last modified
Feb 17, 2020 09:46 AM
—
filed under:
Digital Economy,
RAW Events,
Digital Labour,
Research,
Researchers at Work,
Digital Domestic Work
On November 16, 2019, The Centre for Internet and Society invited officials from the Department of Labour (Government of Karnataka), members of domestic worker unions, domestic workers, company representatives, and civil society researchers at the Student Christian Mission of India House to discuss preliminary findings of an ongoing research project and facilitate a multistakeholder consultation to understand the contemporaneous platformisation of domestic work in India. Please find here a report from this consultation authored by Tasneem Mewa.
Located in
RAW
-
Platforms, Power and Politics: Digital Labour in India
-
by
Ambika Tandon
—
published
Dec 31, 2020
—
last modified
Jul 20, 2021 02:42 AM
—
filed under:
Digital Labour,
Researchers at Work,
Event
The Centre for Internet & Society (CIS) invites you to a webinar wherein it will launch and present four research reports on digital labour in India. The webinar will be hosted on July 28, 2021 at 5 p.m. (IST) / 11.30 a.m. (UTC)
Located in
RAW
-
Roundtable on India’s Gig-work Economy
-
by
Noopur Raval, Anushree Gupta, Rajendra Jadhav, Sarah Zia, and Simiran Lalvani
—
published
Feb 05, 2020
—
last modified
May 19, 2020 06:36 AM
—
filed under:
Gender,
Digital Labour,
Research,
Platform-Work,
Future of Work,
Network Economies,
Researchers at Work,
Mapping Digital Labour in India
Working in the gig-economy has been associated with economic vulnerabilities. However, there are also moral and affective vulnerabilities as workers find their worth measured everyday by their performance of—and at—work and in every interaction and movement. This roundtable discussion marks the end of our series on 'India’s Gig-work Economy' published by the Platypus blog of the Committee on the Anthropology of Science, Technology, and Computing (CASTAC). In this discussion, the researchers reflect on methods, challenges, inter-subjectivities and possible future directions for research on the topic. Listen to the audio track below or read the transcript for the full discussion.
Located in
RAW
-
Sarah Zia - Not knowing as pedagogy: Ride-hailing drivers in Delhi
-
by
Sarah Zia
—
published
Dec 18, 2019
—
last modified
May 19, 2020 06:35 AM
—
filed under:
Digital Labour,
Research,
Platform-Work,
Network Economies,
Publications,
Researchers at Work,
Mapping Digital Labour in India
Working in the gig-economy has been associated with economic vulnerabilities. However, there are also moral and affective vulnerabilities as workers find their worth measured everyday by their performance of—and at—work and in every interaction and movement. This essay by Sarah Zia is the second among a series of writings by researchers associated with the 'Mapping Digital Labour in India' project at the CIS, supported by the Azim Premji University, that were published on the Platypus blog of the Committee on the Anthropology of Science, Technology, and Computing (CASTAC). The essay is edited by Noopur Raval, who co-led the project.
Located in
RAW
-
Simiran Lalvani - Workers’ Fictive Kinship Relations in Mumbai App-based Food Delivery
-
by
Simiran Lalvani
—
published
Dec 04, 2019
—
last modified
May 19, 2020 06:25 AM
—
filed under:
Digital Labour,
Research,
Platform-Work,
Network Economies,
Researchers at Work,
Mapping Digital Labour in India
Working in the gig-economy has been associated with economic vulnerabilities. However, there are also moral and affective vulnerabilities as workers find their worth measured everyday by their performance of—and at—work and in every interaction and movement. This essay by Simiran Lalvani is the first among a series of writings by researchers associated with the 'Mapping Digital Labour in India' project at the CIS, supported by the Azim Premji University, that were published on the Platypus blog of the Committee on the Anthropology of Science, Technology, and Computing (CASTAC). The essay is edited by Noopur Raval, who co-led the project concerned.
Located in
RAW
-
That Is Not A Livelihood – That Is Helplessness”: Field notes from the Fraazo Delivery Workers Strike in Noida, Greater Noida, and Ghaziabad
-
by
Rikta Krishnaswamy
—
published
Apr 24, 2024
—
filed under:
Labour Futures,
Digital Economy,
Gig Work,
Digital Labour,
Researchers at Work
In this essay, Rikta Krishnaswamy of the All India Gig Workers’ Union (AIGWU) narrates her experiences of organising and supporting delivery workers’ collective action against Fraazo (a now-defunct platform for produce and grocery delivery). Her essay sheds light on the challenges workers face in organising for better conditions of work. She describes how platforms hide behind legal smokescreens and threats of police action to shirk their responsibility as employers. To make matters worse, obscure employment terms and work management systems make it harder for workers to seek redress from the government through labour dispute resolution processes.
The essay is illustrative of how digital platforms have exploited and violated freedoms of the gig workers they employ, while facing no accountability. For this to change, gig workers have to be guaranteed employment rights along with collective rights to their data.
Located in
RAW
-
The Platform Economy’s Gatekeeping of Class and Caste Dominance in Urban India
-
by
Ambika Tandon and Aayush Rathi
—
published
Apr 18, 2024
—
last modified
Apr 19, 2024 03:11 AM
—
filed under:
Labour Futures,
Digital Economy,
Homepage,
Digital Labour,
Featured,
Researchers at Work
Ambika Tandon and Aayush Rathi contributed an essay on how gated society management apps like MyGate and NoBrokerHood feed on caste and income inequalities in new datafied forms. The essay features in The Formalization of Social Precarities, an anthology edited by Murali Shanmugavelan and Aiha Nguyen and published with Data & Society.
Located in
RAW
-
Workers’ experiences in app-based taxi and delivery sectors: Key initial findings from multi-city quantitative surveys
-
by
Aayush Rathi, Abhishek Sekharan, Ambika Tandon, Chetna V. M., Chiara Furtado, and Nishkala Sekhar
—
published
Feb 15, 2024
—
last modified
Feb 16, 2024 01:27 AM
—
filed under:
Gig Work,
Digital Labour,
Researchers at Work,
Labour Futures
In 2021-22, the labour research vertical at CIS conducted quantitative surveys with over 1,000 taxi and delivery workers employed in the app-based and offline sectors. The surveys covered key employment indicators, including earnings and working hours, initial investments and work-related cost burdens, income and social security, platform policies and management, and employment arrangements. The surveys were part of the ‘Labour Futures’ project supported by the Internet Society Foundation.
Located in
RAW
-
Your economy, our livelihoods: A policy brief by the All India Gig Workers’ Union
-
by
W.C. Shukla, Rikta Krishnaswamy, Rohin Garg, Gunjan Jena, and S.B. Natarajan
—
published
Jan 30, 2024
—
last modified
Jan 31, 2024 12:02 AM
—
filed under:
Labour Futures,
Digital Economy,
Gig Work,
Digital Labour,
Reserve Bank of India,
Featured,
Homepage
In this policy brief, the All India Gig Workers’ Union (AIGWU) presents its critique on NITI Aayog’s report on India’s platform economy. Through experiences from over 3 years of organising gig workers across India, they highlight fallacies in the report that disregard workers’ experiences and realities. They present alternative recommendations that are responsive to these realities, and offer pathways towards rights-affirming futures for workers in the platform economy.
Located in
RAW
-
Zothan Mawii - COVID-19 and Relief Measures for Gig Workers in India
-
by
Zothan Mawii (Tandem Research)
—
published
Apr 14, 2020
—
last modified
May 19, 2020 05:41 AM
—
filed under:
Gig Work,
Digital Labour,
Research,
Platform-Work,
Future of Work,
Network Economies,
Researchers at Work
CIS is cohosted a webinar with Tandem Research on the impact of the COVID-19 response on the gig economy on 9 April 2020. It was a closed door discussion between representatives of workers' unions, labour activists, and researchers working on gig economy and workers' rights to highlight the demands of workers' groups in the transport, food delivery and care work sectors. We saw this as an urgent intervention in light of the disruption to the gig economy caused by the nationwide lockdown to limit proliferation of COVID-19. This is a summary of the discussions that took place in the webinar authored by Zothan Mawii, a Research Fellow at Tandem Research.
Located in
RAW