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dc.contributor.authorArriagada, Arturo
dc.contributor.authorBonhomme, Macarena
dc.contributor.authorIbáñez, Francisco
dc.contributor.authorLeyton, Jorge
dc.date.accessioned2024-04-10T01:58:23Z
dc.date.available2024-04-10T01:58:23Z
dc.date.issued2023
dc.identifier10.1016/j.diggeo.2023.100063
dc.identifier.issn26663783
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12728/10732
dc.description.abstractWhile there is growing literature regarding the impact of the gig economy in countries of the Global North, the way it operates in Latin America and the Caribbean remains underexplored. This article describes platform work in Chile, especially in the context of COVID-19, which has highlighted the essential role of geographically tethered digital platforms in facilitating essential goods and services in times of social distancing and quarantine. While the gig economy has provided employment for those outside traditional labor markets, its supposedly ‘collaborative’ employment structures obscure the different costs of precarity and informality transferred from platforms to workers (Ravenelle, 2019). Based on 35 interviews with gig workers using the Fairwork framework to evaluate working conditions in the gig economy, this article examines digital labor relations, both on paper and in reality; the conditions and limitations gig workers face daily; and their perceptions regarding such platforms. We discuss the contradictory experiences felt by platform workers, dependent on the platform in some ways, and independent in others. We argue that the inherently contradictory conditions and circumstances of platform work have become even more salient for gig workers in the context of COVID-19: risks increasingly fall on workers as platforms continue to stress their ‘choice’ to do so. This article reveals that the nature of the linkage between platform and worker is eminently a labor relationship, with clearly established elements of worker dependence. © 2023 The Authorses_ES
dc.description.sponsorshipCIPPEC; CITANDA; Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económica; Fundación Centro de Implementación de Políticas Públicas para la Equidad y el Crecimiento; National Development in Africa; International Development Research Centre, IDRC; University of Cape Town, UCT, (Anid/Fondecyt/Postdoctorado/3220193, NCS2021-033, NUDOS-Ncs2022_046); Centro de Estudios de Conflicto y Cohesión Social, COES, (Anid/Fondap/15130009)es_ES
dc.language.isoenes_ES
dc.publisherElsevier Ltdes_ES
dc.subjectChilees_ES
dc.subjectDigital laboures_ES
dc.subjectFair workes_ES
dc.subjectGig economyes_ES
dc.subjectGig workes_ES
dc.subjectPlatform workes_ES
dc.titleThe gig economy in Chile: Examining labor conditions and the nature of gig work in a Global South countryes_ES
dc.typeArticlees_ES


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