Nexus(标准)
分工
女性气质
规范性
情感劳动
班级(哲学)
社会学
灵活性(工程)
商品化
护理工作
无偿工作
工作(物理)
劳动经济学
业务
性别研究
经济
政治学
经济
管理
市场经济
工程类
法学
嵌入式系统
人工智能
计算机科学
机械工程
作者
Ruth Milkman,Luke Elliott-Negri,Kathleen Griesbach,Adam Reich
标识
DOI:10.1177/0896920520949631
摘要
Drawing on original survey and interview data on platform-based food delivery workers, we deploy an intersectional lens to analyze the ways in which the white working-class women who predominate in this sector of the gig economy interpret their work experience. With a focus on the gender–class nexus, we explore the reasons why these workers, especially mothers and other caregivers, self-select into this sector. These include: scheduling flexibility, which facilitates balancing paid work and family care; the opportunity to use previously unpaid food shopping skills to generate income, a neoliberal form of “wages for housework”; and the emotional rewards of serving elderly and disabled customers who cannot easily shop for themselves. Although these workers embrace the traditional gender division of labor and normative femininity, at the same time they express strong class resentment of both the companies they work for and the class and gender entitlements of their most privileged customers.
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