People outside of the formal employment institutions have been taking odd, temporary jobs to make ends meet in China from the pre-industrial society till the contemporary internet society. They have been described as “sangong” (literarily meaning odd jobs and causal worker simultaneously), migrant workers, and now platform or gig workers. Digital platform companies are the latest actors in moving jobs online or managing the digitally mediated workplace in the history of globalization and information capitalism. In this talk, using digital labor in China as a point of departure, Julie Chen will discuss the historical continuity and rupture in the material conditions and social relations for workers in China’s path from “the world’s factory” toward informatizing its economy. She argues that the intertwining and contentious forces of China’s domestic economic restructuring and uneven integration into the global digital capitalism, with various social actors involved, shape the transformation of work in the digital economy. The characteristics of digitalization of work in China have profound implications and significance for labor politics in the country and the world. The talk will end with a discussion on those implications.
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