以社会技术关系为中心研究平台城市主义:欧洲城市公正未来的交叉性。

Urban transformations Pub Date : 2021-01-01 Epub Date: 2021-11-08 DOI:10.1186/s42854-021-00027-z
Natasha A Webster, Qian Zhang
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引用次数: 0

摘要

基于平台的服务正在迅速改变世界各地的城市工作、生活和空间。平台的兴起主要依赖于消耗性的劳动关系,其中有大量移民的参与,必须将其视为相互关联的,是更大社会进程的复制,而不仅仅是技术变革。本视角论文迫切要求从交叉视角出发,更好地理解当代欧洲城市平台城市化的数字-城市界面上的社会-技术关系。迄今为止,对平台和 "零工 "的批评主要集中在基于算法的社会控制、工作条件的恶化、就业关系的问题以及 "零工 "的不稳定性。正在流行的 "科维德-19 "大流行既扰乱了这些问题,也放大了这些问题,加剧了 "零工 "的脆弱性。例如,在瑞典,移民群体和临时工被分别认定为受 Covid 影响最严重的群体,但却很少关注这些群体之间的相互联系,也很少关注这些群体如何共同面对更大的社会经济不平等。因此,我们主张更深入地了解平台背后的社会进程,并积极调查这些进程是如何产生和/或维持不平等的。城市规划者、设计师和政策制定者需要积极应对平台城市化中产生的混合(数字和物理)城市空间,以防止空间和经济不平等。我们主张加强对性别和移民身份等相互关联和重叠的社会类别的认识,将其视为在平台城市主义中以及通过平台城市主义产生的相互构成的压迫和歧视体系的核心。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Centering social-technical relations in studying platform urbanism: intersectionality for just futures in European cities.

Platform-based services are rapidly transforming urban work, lives and spaces around the world. The rise of platforms dependent on largely expendable labour relations, with significant migrant involvement, must be seen as connected, and as replicating larger social processes rather than merely technological changes. This perspective paper urgently calls for an intersectional perspective to better understand social-technical relations crossing the digital-urban interface of platform urbanism in contemporary European cities. Critics of platforms and gig work, to date, have mainly focused on algorithms-based social control, degraded working conditions, problematic employment relations and precariousness of gig work. The ongoing Covid-19 pandemic has both disrupted and amplified these issues, intensifying the vulnerability of gig workers. For example, in Sweden, migrant groups and gig workers were separately identified as being hardest hit by Covid, but with little attention to the interconnectivity between these categories, nor to how these groups are co-positioned vis-a-vis larger socio-economic inequalities. Thus, we argue for a deeper understanding of the social processes underlying platforms and for active investigation of how inequalities are being produced and/or maintained in/by these processes. Urban planners, designers and policy makers will need to actively address the hybrid (digital and physical) urban spaces produced in platform urbanism in order to prevent spatial and economic inequalities. We argue for a stronger recognition of interrelated and overlapping social categories such as gender and migrant status as central to the construction of mutually constitutive systems of oppression and discrimination produced in and through the platform urbanism.

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