Gig work in transnational spaces: infrastructures of migration and the simultaneous lives of migrants in the gig economy

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Abstract

This article explores how platform-mediated gig work is entangled in the migration process across transnational, national and local scales. Drawing on the concepts of simultaneity and migration infrastructure from critical transnational migration studies as well as qualitative interviews with migrants, the analysis focuses on the figures of three migrant gig workers from both EU and non-EU countries to elucidate two matters. First, we analyse how different forms of citizenship produce different ways of responding to the migration infrastructure that results in frictions and/or smoothness across different times and spaces in the migration process. Second, we analyse how migrants who perform platform-mediated gig work on a local scale in Copenhagen, Denmark, establish particular transnational lives. Thus, this article contributes a timely transnational perspective on the relationship between the growing gig economy and migration.

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Andersen, M., & Spanger, M. (2024). Gig work in transnational spaces: infrastructures of migration and the simultaneous lives of migrants in the gig economy. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 50(15), 3751–3767. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2024.2379643

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