Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11718/21791
Title: Partially empowering but not decent? The contradictions of online labour markets
Other Titles: Critical perspectives on work and employment in globalizing India
Authors: D'Cruz, Premilla
Keywords: Crowdsourcing;Decent work;Freelancers;India;Informal sector
Issue Date: 2017
Publisher: Springer
Citation: D’Cruz, P. (2017). Partially empowering but not decent? The contradictions of online labour markets. In E. Noronha, & P. D’Cruz, Critical perspectives on work and employment in globalizing India.
Abstract: Online labour markets (OLMs) are new global workplaces that represent the latest wave of offshoring. Indians have a strong presence on OLMs, being freelancers on both international and national platforms, adding to the country’s large and growing informal workforce. Through a critical hermeneutic phenomenological approach, this chapter examines the experiences of Indian freelancers on Upwork using the lens of decent work. The findings underscore that though full-time freelancers report some sense of empowerment in terms of income, quality of life, long-term investments and upward mobility, career development, work-life balance, link with the West and platform checks and facilities, there are decent work deficits across the four hallmarks of full and productive employment, rights at work ensuring human dignity, social protection and social dialogue. Effective pursuit of the decent work agenda on OLMs calls for counterhegemonic initiatives through global social movement unionism that reconciles labour differences across the North-South divide.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11718/21791
Appears in Collections:Book Chapters

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