Flexible Despotism

A. Wood
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Abstract

This introductory chapter provides an overview of flexible despotism. New economic processes are taking hold in the spaces opened up by the steady decline of collective workplace regulation. No longer is working time understood as a standard, stable eight hours, five days a week. Instead, working time is flexible, on demand, and 24/7. Consequently, many workers are increasingly employed flexibly, while others may not even have an employment contract at all, and instead be classified as self-employed—and yet have their labor controlled by a platform. Even workers with standard, full-time, permanent contracts can experience high levels of insecurity as a result of flexible scheduling within this new temporal order. As a result, the benefits and drawbacks of flexible scheduling have been widely debated. These discussions, however, have tended to focus on issues of job quality, work–life balance, and well-being. This book goes further, by drawing attention to important but under-researched issues of managerial power and workplace control. This is necessary, as it is only when one understands paid work as a power relationship that one is able to see how precarious scheduling constitutes flexible despotism—a new regime of control within the workplace.
灵活的专制
这一导论章概述了灵活的专制主义。在集体工作场所监管的稳步下降所开辟的空间中,新的经济进程正在占据一席之地。工作时间不再被理解为一个标准的、稳定的八小时工作制,一周工作五天。相反,工作时间是灵活的,随叫随到,全天候的。因此,越来越多的工人被灵活雇佣,而另一些人甚至根本没有劳动合同,而是被归类为个体经营者,但他们的劳动却被平台控制。即使是拥有标准的、全职的、永久合同的员工,在这种新的时间秩序下,由于灵活的时间安排,也会感到高度的不安全感。因此,灵活调度的利弊一直备受争议。然而,这些讨论往往集中在工作质量、工作与生活的平衡和幸福等问题上。这本书更进一步,将人们的注意力吸引到管理权力和工作场所控制等重要但研究不足的问题上。这是必要的,因为只有当人们把有偿工作理解为一种权力关系时,人们才能看到不稳定的时间表是如何构成灵活的专制——一种新的工作场所控制制度。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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