Working Group 2 – Dynamics of Virtual Work http://dynamicsofvirtualwork.com Thu, 04 Aug 2016 11:05:52 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.5.1 Meeting of Working Groups and Workshop, Pavia, 21-23 March, 2016 http://dynamicsofvirtualwork.com/meeting-of-working-groups-and-workshop-pavia-21-23-march-2016/ Sat, 12 Dec 2015 11:05:28 +0000 http://dynamicsofvirtualwork.com/?p=4144 A meeting of Working Groups was held in Pavia, near Milan, Italy on 21-22nd March, 2016, hosted by the University of Pavia.

On 21st-22nd March all four Working Groups met in a combination of parallel and plenary sessions. The plenary sessions focused on the sharing economy, followed by a workshop.

Practical details

group shot

Topic: Sharing Economy

There were two sessions on the sharing economy.

The first focused on the extent of the sharing economy, its regulation and the question: ‘Sharing economy: towards shared rules?’

The second addressed the question: ‘How can alternative production and welfare be autonomously financed? and explored alternative finance models.

Programme for Working Group Meetings

The Workshop, which was jointly organised by Working Groups 2 and 3, was held on 22nd-23rd March.

Workshop Programme

Topic: The passions of capitalism: Subjectivity in production and the production of subjectivity in contemporary capitalism 

The last few decades have seen an unprecedented mobilisation of life itself into the accumulation process. Identity, subjectivity, self, emotions, personality, passion, sexuality, the life-world, and the body have all become forces of production for capitalism. This trend has been facilitated very prominently by digital technology. Through various practices, technologies and organisational innovations – from surveillance to interactivity, from mobile devices to location-based applications, and from crowdfunding and peer-production – digital technologies have allowed forces of production located mostly outside of the traditional spaces of production, and entailing the very soul and body of individuals – such as interpersonal communication – to be mobilised and subsumed by capitalism.

These developments have repercussions, both for our analysis of contemporary capitalism and in particular the progressive monetisation and commodification of all aspects of personal life, and for our analysis of virtual workers. They also raise questions of how collective identities and social relations (in work – trade unions and workers’ organisations; outside paid employment – families, households, social groups, civic life) may be reshaped and re-enacted if individualised employment and social relations become increasingly dominant.  Lastly, they also raise the question of spaces where alternative subjectivities may emerge.

In this workshop, we will discuss these developments, and in particular the intersection of production and reproduction, capitalism and subjectivity, skills and passions, work-tasks and persona.  The workshop will be focussed on the following questions:

  • How is life mobilised?
  • How are passionate subjects formed?
  • How, if it all, does this mark a departure from previous modes of labour commodification and exploitation?
  • How are class, gender, ethnic, and other subjectivities mobilised in particular empirical settings?
  • How are collective and social identities affected?  What does this imply for labour organisation, trade unionism and capital-labour relations?

 

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Call for Contributions: Creative Hubs in Question http://dynamicsofvirtualwork.com/call-for-contributions-creative-hubs-in-question/ Mon, 12 Oct 2015 14:24:40 +0000 http://dynamicsofvirtualwork.com/?p=4090 CALL FOR CONTRIBUTIONS: CREATIVE HUBS IN QUESTION

Dr Tarek Virani and Professor Rosalind Gill are putting together a book proposal for an edited volume about ‘creative hubs’, developing out of  our research as part of AHRC’s Creativeworks London http://www.creativeworkslondon.org.uk/research/place-work-knowledge/

The term ‘hub’ seems to be everywhere.  Starting in and around 2003, the growth and proliferation of these types of  largely urban industrial agglomeration has been exponential. From San Francisco to London to Moscow to Durban to Hanoi to Shanghai, creative hubs are on the increase. But the academic work on creative hubs is surprisingly scarce. Although the term is currently in wide use in policy circles its actual meaning is not always clear. The term has no commonly accepted definition and has been criticised for lacking clarity as well as being ‘all encompassing’. Hubs have been understood as co-working spaces, studios, incubators, accelerators, districts, quarters, zones and/or a mix of all of the above.  The lack of clarity – let alone consensus – is  especially troubling given that policymakers, research councils, consultants, and governments have been so quick to promote and endorse the effectiveness of creative hubs in catalysing growth and innovation in local creative economies, as well as producing urban regeneration.

We are looking for expressions of interest and abstracts for a book that will look critically at the idea of ‘creative hubs’ from interdisciplinary perspectives including Sociology, Geography, Media and Communications, Culture and Creative Industries,  Critical Policy studies, Gender studies, Race and Ethnicity, and Urban Studies.  Contributions may be empirical studies of actual hubs, or may be theoretical reflections on the concept of creative hubs. We are interested in what ‘creative hubs’ as a notion does performatively/ideologically in particular (global/local) policy contexts; we are interested in where ‘hubs’ are situated in relation to existing ideas such as ‘clusters’ or ‘co-working spaces’; we are interested in critically examining how hubs may intervene in geographies of inequality, austerity and injustice; we are interested to explore how the concept of creative hubs travels and materialises in different contexts, and in exploring how ‘creative hubs’ may relate to ‘knowledge hubs’ or ‘innovation spaces’ – either as an idea or in concrete locations. Above all we hope the volume will start a critical conversation that interrogates the taken-for-grantedness of ‘creative hubs’.

We have approached Palgrave who have expressed interest in considering such a volume.  If you are interested in contributing, please send an abstract to Rosalind.Gill.2@city.ac.uk  by November 13th 2015.  If accepted, final drafts of chapters will be needed by November 2016.

Rosalind Gill
Professor of Social and Cultural Analysis

Room D610
School of Arts and Social Sciences

City University London

Northampton Square

London EC1V 0HB

rosalind.gill.2@city.ac.uk

 

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6th Meeting of Working Groups, Pärnu, September 16-18, 2015 http://dynamicsofvirtualwork.com/6th-meeting-of-working-groups-parnu-september-16-18-2015/ Thu, 14 May 2015 07:32:11 +0000 http://dynamicsofvirtualwork.com/?p=3891 The 6th Meeting of Working Groups took place at Pärnu College, University of Tartu, Estonia from 16th-18th September, 2015.

Pictures of the event Programme Presentations Getting there Local information Accommodation ]]>
Symposium on Ambient Play, Barcelona, June 20-21, 2015 http://dynamicsofvirtualwork.com/symposium-on-ambient-play-barcelona-june-20-21-2015/ Fri, 14 Nov 2014 13:28:03 +0000 http://dynamicsofvirtualwork.com/?p=3760 A workshop on Ambient Play: Digital creativity, play and labour in everyday life was held in collaboration with the Digital Ethnography Research Centre of RMIT University in Barcelona, Spain on June 20-21, 2015

some pictures from the event pictures from RMIT Barcelona workshop

Programme Abstracts Accommodation

The event will be held at the RMIT Europe Centre in Barcelona, Minerva 2 08006 Barcelona, Spain.

The aim of the symposium is to address the new types of labour emerging around mobile media and gaming areas. Phenomena such as Let’s Play (shared videos of people playing games) and mobile lifestyle apps (as part of the quantified self) represent new forms of play and labour within everyday life. This symposium will draw from experts around digital methods and theories to outline some new ways for understanding these phenomenona.

Some of the questions that will be addressed include:

  • What are some of the socio-cultural and creative ways mobile phone users are shaping apps through existing work and leisure practices?
  • How are mobile media apps like mindfulness quantifying a user’s life? And how can users resist these forms of normalisations?
  • How are emergent game player industries like Let’s Play (shared videos of playing) shaping relationships and representations of play, labour and playbour? How does this reshape conceptualisations between players and spectatorship?

 

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Training School, Vienna, July 6-10, 2015 http://dynamicsofvirtualwork.com/training-school-vienna-july-6-10-2015/ Wed, 15 Oct 2014 17:21:31 +0000 http://dynamicsofvirtualwork.com/?p=3690 The global digital Workplace – New Ways of Working, New Forms of Labour, a training school for PhD students and Early Stage Researchers was hosted by the Department of Sociology at the University of Vienna, July 6-10, 2015

Some pictures from the event:  Pictures from the Dynamics of Virtual Work Summer

This COST Training School also constituted the 5th Marie Jahoda Summer School of Sociology to be held at the University of Vienna.The event was therefore a close co-operation between the University and the COST Action.

Two interrelated processes have transformed work and labour on a global scale: The wider reach of multinational corporations and global value chains and the digitisation of information and the advances of telecommunications and the Internet. They have contributed to new dynamics of job relocation and shifting international divisions of labour, new forms of cooperation over distance and new opportunities to integrate geographically distributed work processes. These changes have also brought forth entirely new types of ‘digital’ or ‘virtual’ labour, both paid and unpaid. The summer school will explore recent developments of digital work and labour within corporations, along global value chains and over the Internet. It will devote special attention to the ways in which people experience new forms of work and labour and to their individual and collective reactions.

Focusing on the global digital workplace, the Marie Jahoda Summer School of Sociology will provide an academic frame for a deeper and interdisciplinary approach to these complex processes. An understanding will be developed of how changes in work take place as new forms of virtual labour emerge and what their implications are for work organization, workers identities and workers’ agency. Account will be taken of the ways in which work and labour are being transformed in the context of global economic and technical dynamics and in relation to their local embeddedness. This may include the shifting boundaries between paid and unpaid work and between ‘work’ and ‘play’.

During the Summer-School the participants have to present a research paper (about 20 pages) and subsequently have the chance to discuss it with the audience. Each day of the summer school is devoted to a core topic and is led by an experienced and distinguished scientist. Additionally, two keynote speeches by renowned researchers and social events in the historic city of Vienna are planned.

Programme Accommodation and how to get there Flyer

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Photo courtesy of the University of Vienna.

 

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5th Meeting of Working Groups, Peniche, June 3-5, 2015 http://dynamicsofvirtualwork.com/meeting-of-working-groups-peniche-june-4-5-2015-2/ Wed, 24 Sep 2014 08:06:36 +0000 http://dynamicsofvirtualwork.com/?p=3671 A meeting of all four Working Groups took place at the Escola Superior de Turismo e Technologia do Mar (ESTM) in the seaside town of Peniche in Portugal.

Pictures  Presentations  Programme  Accommodation  Location  Local transport in Peniche  Venue  Setting

Sponsored by APDSI, the Portuguese Association for promoting the Information Society, APSIOT, the Portuguese Association of Sociology of Industry, Organisations and Work and APS, the Portuguese Association of Sociology.

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Conference, Hatfield, September 3-5, 2014 http://dynamicsofvirtualwork.com/hatfield-conference/ Thu, 11 Sep 2014 12:56:11 +0000 http://dynamicsofvirtualwork.com/?p=3514
The Dynamics of Virtual Work: the Transformation of Labour in a Digital Global Economy

This conference took place at the University of Hertfordshire in Hatfield, UK on September 3-5, 2014.

fielder centre

Presentations from the conference Picture gallery Plenary speakers Programme and abstracts How to get there Register Accommodation on campus Alternative accommodation Conference dinner Venue

Sponsored by COST (European Co-operation in Science and Technology), Work Organisation Labour and Globalisation, Competition and Change , Triple C and the Journal of Institutional Economics

Globalisation and technological change have transformed where people work, when and how. Digitisation of information has altered labour processes out of all recognition whilst telecommunications have enabled jobs to be relocated globally. But ICTs have also enabled the creation of entirely new types of ‘digital’ or ‘virtual’ labour, both paid and unpaid, shifting the borderline between ‘play’ and ‘work’ and creating new types of unpaid labour connected with the consumption and co-creation of goods and services. The implications of this are far-reaching, both for policy and for scholarship. The dynamics of these changes cannot be captured adequately within the framework of any single academic discipline. On the contrary, they can only be understood in the light of a combination of insights from fields including political economy, the sociology of work, organisational theory, economic geography, development studies, industrial relations, comparative social policy, communications studies, technology policy and gender studies

COST Action IS1202 brings together an international network of leading experts from 31 European Countries with researchers from other parts of the world to develop a multi-faceted approach to understanding these phenomena. This international conference will open up an interactive dialogue between scholars both inside and outside the network.

Contents

 

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Workshop on Gender, Barcelona, 10-12 November, 2014 http://dynamicsofvirtualwork.com/workshop-on-gender-barcelona-10-12-november/ Thu, 13 Feb 2014 14:25:49 +0000 http://dynamicsofvirtualwork.com/?p=3199 A workshop on Gender Perspectives in the Analysis of Virtual Work was held at the Internet Interdisciplinary Institute in Barcelona, Spain on 10-12 November, 2014.


Pictures Presentations

 

Conference venue Programme Accommodation How to get there

The aims of the workshop are to:

  • highlight the value of a gender perspective in the analysis of the development and implications of virtual work, and to support the use of this perspective among members of the Action;
  • review theoretical developments in gender and their application to virtual work; and
  • contribute to the positioning of the Action’s analyses within current international thinking on gender and virtual work.

One of the core aims of this COST Action is to bring together the research perspectives and problematics of different disciplinary approaches to developments in virtual work, in order to create an intellectual dialogue to advance our understanding of these developments.  Although virtual workers have two sexes, so that gender is at the core of every aspect of virtual work, notably absent from many accounts of both workplace and technological developments has been a recognition of their gender dimensions.  Drawing on the expertise of leading researchers and writers on the gender relations of virtual work, this workshop will focus explicitly on the contribution of a gender perspective to an understanding of the development and implications of virtual work.

 

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Third Meeting of Working Groups, Bucharest, March 26-28, 2014 http://dynamicsofvirtualwork.com/third-meeting-of-working-groups-bucharest-march-26-28-2014/ Mon, 11 Nov 2013 15:36:41 +0000 http://dynamicsofvirtualwork.com/?p=2982 The third meeting of Working Groups was hosted by the University of Bucharest in Romania, March 26-28, 2014

The Management Committee of the COST Action met from 10.00 to 16.00 on March 26th.

Presentations Pictures

The Working Group Programme opened with a plenary session at 17.00 on October 26th, with a keynote speech from be Gina Neff, author of Venture Labor: Work and the Burden of Risk in Innovative Industries, (Co-Winner, 2013 American Sociological Association Section on Communication and Information Technologies (CITASA) Book Award).
This was followed by a buffet reception.
Conference Venue and how to get there
Programme
Getting around in Bucharest
Accommodation
The programme included plenary sessions, with a particular focus on virtual work in creative and IT industries.
Some highlights
Tatiana Mazali spoke on ‘Digital creativity and new professions biographies in action to overcome the crisis’
Irene Mandl presented the latest results from the Eurofound Project on ‘New forms of Employment’
James Stewart presented his recent research on Online Work Exchanges.
Karin Hippler from Elance (a leading Online Work Exchange) spoke about the online work revolution while Mike Holderness from the European Federation of Journalists (representing creative and content-producing virtual workers) explored what this means for creative and workers. Vasile Baltac from the Council of European Professional Informatics Societies (representing IT professionals) gave an overview of the changing landscape of eskills.
There was also be an interactive question-and-answer session for Early Stage Researchers and PhD students on ‘Getting published’.
Working Groups met in parallel to present their ongoing work and develop future plans.

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Conference, Hatfield, September 3-5, 2014 http://dynamicsofvirtualwork.com/call-for-papers/ Tue, 18 Jun 2013 10:29:04 +0000 http://dynamicsofvirtualwork.com/?p=2773 A major international conference will be held at the University of Hertfordshire, in Hatfield, near London, UK entitled ‘The Dynamics of Virtual Work: the Transformation of Labour in a Digital Global Economy’

Programme How to get there Call for papers Register Accommodation Conference dinner Conference centre Conference centre

Sponsored by COST (European Co-operation in Science and Technology), Work Organisation Labour and Globalisation, Competition and Change and Triple C

Globalisation and technological change have transformed where people work, when and how. Digitisation of information has altered labour processes out of all recognition whilst telecommunications have enabled jobs to be relocated globally. But ICTs have also enabled the creation of entirely new types of ‘digital’ or ‘virtual’ labour, both paid and unpaid, shifting the borderline between ‘play’ and ‘work’ and creating new types of unpaid labour connected with the consumption and co-creation of goods and services. The implications of this are far-reaching, both for policy and for scholarship. The dynamics of these changes cannot be captured adequately within the framework of any single academic discipline. On the contrary, they can only be understood in the light of a combination of insights from fields including political economy, the sociology of work, organisational theory, economic geography, development studies, industrial relations, comparative social policy, communications studies, technology policy and gender studies

COST Action IS1202 brings together an international network of leading experts from 29 European Countries with researchers from other parts of the world to develop a multi-faceted approach to understanding these phenomena. This international conference will open up an interactive dialogue between scholars both inside and outside the network.

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