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Autonomous regulation of work in the gig economy: The first collective bargaining agreement for riders in Sweden

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Article

Selberg, Niklas

European Labour Law Journal

2023

14

4

609-627

digital economy ; crowd work ; collective bargaining ; trade union ; precarious employment ; collective agreement ; delivery ; working conditions ; labour market ; labour law

Sweden

Collective bargaining

https://doi.org/10.1177/20319525231178980

English

Bibliogr.

"The gigification of work has—in line with global trends—reached the highly-regulated Swedish labour market, with its high degree of both union density and coverage of collective bargaining agreements—and high labour costs. More and more gig workers are becoming union members, and in late January 2021 the first Swedish collective bargaining agreement (CBA) for food delivery platform workers (riders) was concluded between the Transport Workers' Union and Foodora. The article illustrates to what extent, and how, the inherited formulas for trade union activity and collective bargaining are made relevant for platform-mediated work. The role of old actors and regulatory means are put to use in the ‘new' labour market. This article provides an analysis of the first CBA in the Swedish gig economy and illustrates how pre-existing labour law norms are both a restraining and an enabling factor for trade unions and collective bargaining in the gig economy. What can be learned about the nature of work in the gig economy or platform-mediated work from the way it has been integrated into the Swedish model for labour relations with its particular traits? Or, what can be learned from the first CBA in the gig economy in the promised land of collective bargaining?"

Digital



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