合法性
战略信息系统
控制(管理)
零工经济
软系统方法论
公共关系
知识管理
透视图(图形)
信息技术
管理信息系统
计算机科学
业务
信息系统
法律与经济学
计算机安全
运筹学
社会学
政治学
工程类
管理
法学
经济
人工智能
不稳定性
政治
作者
Martin Wiener,W. Alec Cram,Alexander Benlian
标识
DOI:10.1080/0960085x.2021.1977729
摘要
Organisations increasingly rely on algorithms to exert automated managerial control over workers, referred to as algorithmic control (AC). The use of AC is already commonplace with platform-based work in the gig economy, where independent workers are paid for completing a given task (or "gig"). The combination of independent work alongside intensive managerial monitoring and guidance via AC raises questions about how gig workers perceive AC practices and judge their legitimacy, which could help explain critical worker behaviours such as turnover and non-compliance. Based on a three-dimensional conceptualisation of micro-level legitimacy tailored to the gig work context (autonomy, fairness, and privacy), we develop a research model that links workers' perceptions of two predominant forms of AC (gatekeeping and guiding) to their legitimacy judgements and behavioural reactions. Using survey data from 621 Uber drivers, we find empirical support for the central role of micro-level legitimacy judgements in mediating the relationships between gig workers' perceptions of different AC forms and their continuance intention and workaround use. Contrasting prior work, our study results show that workers do not perceive AC as a universally "bad thing" and that guiding AC is in fact positively related to micro-level legitimacy judgements. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed.
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