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This collection presents an array of policy debates and
implications emerging from virtual work. The authors cover a range
of areas, including: conceptual debates, measuring virtual work;
discourses and levels of policy intervention; the role of the
sharing and collaborative economy; and resultant challenges for
organized labour, law and regulation. The authors of the chapters
analyse the ways in which processes of digitalization leading to
virtual work impact so many aspects of our lives: the way we buy,
sell, network, communicate, participate, create, consume, and, of
course, the way we work. In turn they focus on the subsequent
implications for the future of work as well as the viability of
existing social protection systems. The developments examined here
are salient for both policy stakeholders and for the academic
community in areas such as labour sociology, industrial relations,
gender studies, political economy, and economic geography.
This collection presents an array of policy debates and
implications emerging from virtual work. The authors cover a range
of areas, including: conceptual debates, measuring virtual work;
discourses and levels of policy intervention; the role of the
sharing and collaborative economy; and resultant challenges for
organized labour, law and regulation. The authors of the chapters
analyse the ways in which processes of digitalization leading to
virtual work impact so many aspects of our lives: the way we buy,
sell, network, communicate, participate, create, consume, and, of
course, the way we work. In turn they focus on the subsequent
implications for the future of work as well as the viability of
existing social protection systems. The developments examined here
are salient for both policy stakeholders and for the academic
community in areas such as labour sociology, industrial relations,
gender studies, political economy, and economic geography.
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