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Biopolitical platforms: the perverse virtues of digital labour

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  • Karen Gregory
  • Jathan Sadowski

Abstract

By mediating everyday activities, social interactions, and economic transactions, digital platforms play an increasingly dominant role in contemporary capitalism. These platforms have excelled at extracting value from assets and labour that have been deemed un(der)productive. While the burgeoning literature on platform capitalism and digital labour has focused on these systems of value extraction, there has been much less attention on how platforms have also undertaken a project of subject formation and thereby capital development. By theorising empirical research with people who work as food delivery workers for Deliveroo, we show how platforms, specifically those that provide services in urban places, encourage, even require, workers to develop a form of human capital based on three perverse virtues that make them more productive, more desirable workers: flexibility, vitality, and legibility. We then analyse the operations and implications of biopolitical platforms—by which we mean platforms that create and administer a biopolitical governance regime in order to cultivate and accumulate capital, both human and data.

Suggested Citation

  • Karen Gregory & Jathan Sadowski, 2021. "Biopolitical platforms: the perverse virtues of digital labour," Journal of Cultural Economy, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 14(6), pages 662-674, November.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:jculte:v:14:y:2021:i:6:p:662-674
    DOI: 10.1080/17530350.2021.1901766
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    Cited by:

    1. Guillaume Dumont & Stefano de Marco & Ellen Johanna Heslper, 2024. "Online job search discouragement : How employment platforms and digital exclusion shape the experience of low-qualified job seekers?," Post-Print hal-04325753, HAL.
    2. Dumont, Guillaume & De Marco, Stefano & Heslper, Ellen, 2024. "Online job search discouragement: how employment platforms and digital exclusion shape the experience of low‐qualified job seekers?," LSE Research Online Documents on Economics 120166, London School of Economics and Political Science, LSE Library.

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