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Portrait Lea Fünfschilling. Photo: Emma Lord.

Lea Fünfschilling

Associate Professor | Senior Lecturer

Portrait Lea Fünfschilling. Photo: Emma Lord.

An Institutional Logics Perspective on the Gig Economy

Author

  • Koen Frenken
  • Taneli Vaskelainen
  • Lea Fuenfschilling
  • Laura Piscicelli

Editor

  • Indre Maurer
  • Johanna Mair
  • Achim Oberg

Summary, in English

We witness rising tensions between online gig-economy platforms, incumbent firms, regulators, and labor unions. In this chapter, we use the framework of institutional logics as an analytical lens and scheme to understand the fundamental institutional challenges prompted by the advent of the online gig economy. We view gig-economy platforms as corporations that organize and self-regulate markets. In doing so, they span two parallel markets: the market for platforms competing to provide intermediation services and the market for the self-employed competing on platforms to provide peer-to-peer services. Self-regulation by platforms also weakens the traditional roles of the state. While the corporation and market logics empower the platform, they weaken self-employed suppliers as platforms’ design constrain suppliers to grow into a full-fledged business by limiting their entrepreneurial freedom. At the same time, current labor law generally does not classify suppliers as employees of the platform company, which limits the possibility to unionize. The current resolutions to this institutional misalignment are sought in “band aid solutions” at the level of sectors. Instead, as we argue, macro-institutional reform may be needed to re-institutionalize gig work into established institutional logics.

Department/s

  • CIRCLE

Publishing year

2020

Language

English

Pages

83-105

Publication/Series

Research in the Sociology of Organizations

Volume

66

Document type

Book chapter

Publisher

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Topic

  • Economics

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISBN: 978-1-78756-180-9
  • ISBN: 978-1-78756-179-3