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- Title
MICRO-ENTREPRENEURS, DEPENDENT CONTRACTORS, AND INSTASERFS: UNDERSTANDING ONLINE LABOR PLATFORM WORKFORCES.
- Authors
KUHN, KRISTINE M.; MALEKI, AMIR
- Abstract
The rapidly growing number of people who find work via online labor platforms are not employees, nor do they necessarily fit traditional conceptualizations of independent contractors, freelancers, or the self-employed. The ambiguous nature of their employment status and its implications for worker well-being have attracted substantial controversy, but to date most empirical research in this area has focused on the market efficiency of a single platform rather than on workers themselves and related human resource management issues. Research progress will require understanding how online labor platform work differs from other types of nonstandard employment arrangements, as well as critical differences across labor platform firms in how work and workers are managed. This paper proposes a conceptual classification framework to facilitate research on the attitudes, experiences, and outcomes of workers who use these platforms. We explore how labor platform firms' operational choices shape how control is allocated across workers, clients, and the firm, and how they influence workers' autonomy, incentives, and degree of economic dependence on the firm. Implications for theory development, research, and managing worker-firm relations are discussed.
- Subjects
LABOR supply; PERSONNEL management; EMPLOYEE well-being; FREELANCERS; DEPENDENCY theory (International relations); CONTRACTORS
- Publication
Academy of Management Perspectives, 2017, Vol 31, Issue 3, p183
- ISSN
1558-9080
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.5465/amp.2015.0111