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Beyond Mobilisation at McDonald's: Towards Networked Organising
In: Wood AJ (2020) Beyond mobilisation at McDonald's: Towards Networked Organising. Capital and Class.
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Unemployment and Well-Being
In: Wood A.J and Burchell B.J (2017) Unemployment in the 21st Century. In Lewis A (2018) Cambridge Handbook of Economics and Psychology 2nd Edition. Cambridge University Press.
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Flexible Despotism: Workplace Control in the Informational Age
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Despotism on demand: how power operates in the flexible workplace
"Experiences of paid work have shifted radically over the last 30 years with the rise of flexible scheduling and the gig economy. In this book, Alex Wood attempts to provide an updated account of power in this changing economy. With in-depth case studies of two of the largest retail businesses in the world, one in the United States and one in the United Kingdom, he sheds light on a new despotic mode of domination in which managers discipline workers through reducing the quantity, stability, and sociability of their hours. In turn workers must continually strive to maintain their manager's favor in the hope of receiving 'schedule gifts', the granting of additional hours and the rearranging of schedules. Workers experience the operation of flexible scheduling as acts of kindness. As such, schedule gifts bind workers to their managers' interests through feelings of gratitude and moral obligation. In this way precarious scheduling gives rise to what is a new regime of power for the on-demand economy."
Consent, Control, and Contradictions in the Post-Fordist Work Organisation
In: Critical sociology, Band 50, Heft 2, S. 345-350
ISSN: 1569-1632
Beyond mobilisation at McDonald's: Towards networked organising
In: Capital & class, Band 44, Heft 4, S. 493-502
ISSN: 2041-0980
This article uses McAlevey's mobilising/organising dichotomy to analyse the recent McDonald's mobilisation in Britain. It argues that this movement has had some impressive successes but building on these requires greater organising activities. However, conventional union organising techniques are unlikely to be successful in hospitality. Instead, the approach of another low-wage worker movement OUR Walmart demonstrates how social media can be used not only to benefit mobilising activities but to enable organising beyond the workplace.
Flexible scheduling, degradation of job quality and barriers to collective voice
In: Human relations: towards the integration of the social sciences, Band 69, Heft 10, S. 1989-2010
ISSN: 1573-9716, 1741-282X
This article examines the operation of flexible scheduling in practice through a case study of a large retail firm in the United Kingdom. It includes analysis of 39 semi-structured interviews, participant observation of shop floor work and non-participant observation of union organizing as well as analysis of key documents. The findings highlight the high level of generalized temporal flexibility across employment statuses. This temporal flexibility enables firm flexibility without necessitating a reliance upon contingent workers. Temporal flexibility is found to entail manager-control of flexible scheduling and is shown to be damaging to perceptions of job quality as it acts as a barrier to work-life balance. Union presence and collective bargaining at the firm are found to be ineffective at influencing flexible scheduling so as to improve job quality. This ineffectiveness can be explained by the union operating in an employer-dominated industrial relations environment in which its associational power is unable to compensate for a lack of institutional and structural economic power.
Book review: Tom Malleson, After Occupy: Economic Democracy for the 21st Century
In: Work, employment and society: a journal of the British Sociological Association, Band 29, Heft 5, S. 884-886
ISSN: 1469-8722
Antagonism Beyond Employment: How the 'Subordinated Agency' of Labour Platforms Generates Conflict in the Remote Gig Economy
In: Socio-Economic Review, 2021
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Platform Precarity: Surviving Algorithmic Insecurity in the Gig Economy
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The Power of Social Media as a Labour Campaigning Tool: Lessons from Our Walmart and the Fight for 15
In: Pasquier V and Wood AJ (2018) ETUI Policy Brief, European Economic, Employment and Social Policy, N° 10/2018. ETUI: Brussels.
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Platforms Disrupting Reputation: Precarity and Recognition Struggles in the Remote Gig Economy
In: Sociology: the journal of the British Sociological Association, Band 57, Heft 5, S. 999-1016
ISSN: 1469-8684
Digitalisation and the use of algorithms have raised concerns over the future of work, the gig economy being identified by some as particularly concerning. In this article, we draw on 70 interviews in addition to participant observations to highlight the role of gig economy platforms in producing a novel form of reputational insecurity. This insecurity is generated by platforms disrupting the traditional operation of industry reputation in freelance markets. We highlight three areas of transformation (recognition, power relations and transparency) in which platforms disrupt the social regulation of reputation and thus algorithmically amplify uncertainty. We also detail how workers individually and collectively attempt to re-embed reputation within interpersonal relations to reduce this novel insecurity.
Antagonism beyond employment: how the 'subordinated agency' of labour platforms generates conflict in the remote gig economy
In: Socio-economic review, Band 19, Heft 4, S. 1369-1396
ISSN: 1475-147X
AbstractThis article investigates why gig economy workers who see themselves as self-employed freelancers also engage in collective action traditionally associated with regular employment. Using ethnographic evidence on the remote gig economy in North America, the UK and the Philippines, we argue that labour platforms increase the agency of workers to contract with clients and thus reduce the risk of false self-employment in terms of the worker–client relationship. However, in doing so, platforms create a new source of subordination to the platform itself. We term this phenomenon 'subordinated agency', and demonstrate that it entails a 'structured antagonism' with platforms that manifests in three areas: fees, competition and worker voice mechanisms. Subordinated agency creates worker desire for representation, greater voice and even unionization towards the platform, while preserving entrepreneurial attitudes towards clients.
Dynamics of Contention in the Gig Economy: Rage Against the Platform, Customer, or State?
In: New Technology, Work & Employment, Forthcoming
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