Solidarity and Resistance in the Platform Economy in France: Refugee Gig Workers and Mobilization
Master thesis

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Date
2024-06-03Metadata
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Abstract
This thesis explores the work conditions for refugee gig couriers in Nantes, France. It examineswhether workers manage to express solidarity in order to act and bargain collectively againstterms that they perceive unjust and exploitative. The thesis presents the results of a six-monthfieldwork, utilizing participative observation and interviews with refugee gig couriers. Themain insights all address the difficulty of demanding better labor terms when finding oneselfin a temporary situation: First, refugees are pushed towards the gig economy, as they are subjectto dispossession. They consider gig work their best possible work option. Second, I find thatworkers are disinclined to bargain collectively for better work conditions, as none of themintends to stay in Nantes. The city is rather a part of their migrant trajectory. Third, I discoverthat workers, despite their status as independent contractors, are not subjugated to isolativework, as they shape social relations within the gig economy. While these social relations haveproven functional in terms of mobilizing for collective action, the workers do have difficultiesbargaining collectively across social groups. And fourth, workers are unaware of howalgorithmic business management in the gig economy impacts their work situation, andtherefore, they tend to displace their anger and mobilize action against other antagonisms thanthe platform company itself. Given these insights, it seems this category of workers need formalregulations to secure their basic needs and proper labor standards.