04936nam 22006495 450 991094753770332120250109115239.09789819602780981960278510.1007/978-981-96-0278-0(CKB)37178115800041(MiAaPQ)EBC31876189(Au-PeEL)EBL31876189(DE-He213)978-981-96-0278-0(OCoLC)1484186049(EXLCZ)993717811580004120250109d2024 u| 0engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierPrecarious Workers in the Gig Economy Neoliberalism and its Discontents in Indonesia /by Diatyka Widya Permata Yasih1st ed. 2024.Singapore :Springer Nature Singapore :Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan,2024.1 online resource (364 pages)Contestations in Contemporary Southeast Asia,2661-83629789819602773 9819602777 Chapter 1: Introduction -- Chapter 2: Work, Workers' Subjectivity and Workplace Struggles Under Precarity: Theoretical and Comparative Considerations -- Chapter 3: The Emergence of a New Precarity: The Indonesian Trajectory -- Chapter 4: Neoliberalism at Work in the Indonesian Gig Economy -- Chapter 5: Resistance to Managerial Control Amid Consent to the New Precarity -- Chapter 6: Workers Solidarity in an Age of Precarity -- Chapter 7: Precarious Gig Workers' Politics: Challenging the Expansion of Precarity in the Gig Economy.Yasih decisively advances the state of the art in research on the politics and political economy of precarity. Mobilising conceptual resources from Marxian political economy and Foucauldian governmentality studies, she presents an empirically rich analysis of work and workers in the Indonesian gig economy. A tour de force that navigates multiple spatial scales and their many interconnections, Yasih's book shows us how managerial control is both exercised and contested in Indonesia's app-based transport sector, and deftly explores the challenges that workers confront as they attempt to forge bonds of solidarity against the individualising pressures of neoliberal entrepreneurialism. This book is a signal achievement in its field of research and will be read with interest by critical scholars in the field of development studies, labour studies, and Asian studies. -Alf Gunvald Nilsen, the University of Pretoria, South Africa. This book focuses on gig work and organising among gig workers in the Indonesian online transport service, situated within the context of widespread precaritisation and digitalisation in today's world of work. It addresses the challenges experienced by precarious gig workers in Indonesia in articulating their struggles through the discourse of precarity. Such challenges are related to the reproduction of neoliberal-derived entrepreneurial aspirations amidst the historical relative absence of stable work patterns (previously associated with more advanced economies), and the historically rooted marginalisation of broad-based labour movements as a social force. Though showcasing the specific experiences of Indonesian workers, the analysis in this book is supplemented by broad comparative insights. It offers empirically based analysis for those interested in new forms of collective organisations and politics that emerge among workers under the imperatives of neoliberalism in Indonesia, and by extension Southeast Asia. Diatyka Widya Permata Yasih, PhD, is an assistant professor at the Department of Sociology and Deputy Director for Academic Affairs at the Asia Research Centre, Faculty of Social and Political Sciences, Universitas Indonesia. Her research is centred on increasing precarity in work and in life under neoliberal pressures and its link to social and political developments in contemporary Indonesia.Contestations in Contemporary Southeast Asia,2661-8362Political sociologyIndustrial sociologyEconomicsAsiaPolitics and governmentPolitical SociologySociology of WorkPolitical Economy and Economic SystemsAsian PoliticsPolitical sociology.Industrial sociology.Economics.AsiaPolitics and government.Political Sociology.Sociology of Work.Political Economy and Economic Systems.Asian Politics.306.2Widya Permata Yasih Diatyka1792124MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910947537703321Precarious Workers in the Gig Economy4330241UNINA