By continuing your navigation on this site, you accept the use of a simple identification cookie. No other use is made with this cookie.OK
Main catalogue
Main catalogue
0

An occupational health and safety perspective on EU initiatives to regulate platform work: patching up gaps or structural game changers?

Bookmarks Report an error
Article

Cefaliello, Aude

Journal of Work Health and Safety Regulation

2023

1

1

117-137

crowd work ; occupational safety and health ; regulation ; occupational risks ; artificial intelligence ; working conditions ; EU Directive

EU countries

Law

English

Bibliogr.

"Rather than being new, platform work extends pre-existing trends: greater control and surveillance, greater job precarity, and greater worker isolation and workplace fragmentation. Nevertheless, platform work distinguishes itself by its unique usage of algorithmic management software to constantly monitor, organize, and evaluate workers. These two features of platform work adversely affect both workers' physical and mental health. Platform workers are exposed to layers of risks: traditional risks and risks due to the usage of artificial intelligence (AI) at the workplace. Even if these risks are preventable, the widespread misclassification of platform workers as independent contractors shifts the legal and financial responsibilities to prevent the risks onto these workers, even if they do not have the organizational means and powers to do so. After providing a mapping of the risks that platform workers are exposed to, and the challenges they are facing in practice due to their fragmented employment setting (often combining offline work with platform work), this article examines the recent European Union (EU) initiatives affecting platform work—the Directive to improve working conditions of platform work, and the Artificial Intelligence Act (AI Act). Thus, using a socio-legal methodology, the article aims to contribute to on-going debates on the platform economy and AI by providing a critical analysis of whether these two recent EU initiatives to regulate platform work address a minima the challenges previously raised by the increased use of digital platforms, and, in particular, whether they contain provisions that will effectively empower and protect platform …"

Digital



Bookmarks Report an error