Platform capitalism in the city
Itinerant life, digital rentierism and precarious work
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1344/sn2024.28.46125Keywords:
platform capitalism, digital workers, platform urbanism, urban life, urban transformationAbstract
This special issue is the result of collaborative research carried out within the framework of two projects: LIKEALOCAL: Sociospatial impacts of Airbnb. Tourism and transformation in four Spanish cities - RTI2018-093479-A-I00 (2019-2021) and ONDEMANDCITY: Platform capitalism, digital workers and the techification of everyday life in the contemporary city - PID2021-122482OB-I00 (2022-2025). The papers in this special issue analyse key issues of the digital turn in urban studies, focusing on the pre-eminence of platforms in the tourism-led economic and social restructuring of our cities.
This 'big platformisation of cities' has generated changes in urban lifestyles, consumption patterns and forms of capital accumulation, impacting on trade relations, forms of mobility and labor market shifts in the city. Therefore, theoretical concepts such as 'platform economy', 'platform capitalism' or 'platform urbanism' are being used to explain current shifts in the dynamics of urban capital accumulation, leaving behind innocuous ones such as 'collaborative economy' or 'smart city'. Such conceptual twists reflect the analytical relevance of platform-mediated labor and the mechanisms of surplus value extraction from platforms to fully unveil the spatial and social transformations in the city. Specifically, the papers of this special issue follow three fundamental themes: the role of digital platforms in the itinerant lifes of urban dwellers, the dynamics of tourism rentierism in the platform age, and the precariousness of labour in digital capitalism. Taken together, these multidisciplinary perspectives illustrate the relevance of understanding how digital platforms shape contemporary urban life through their interactions with space, time, landscape and urban societies.
References
Aalbers, Manuel B. 2015. “The Great Moderation, the Great Excess and the global housing crisis”. International Journal of Housing Policy, 15(1), 43-60. https://doi.org/10.1080/14616718.2014.997431
Aalbers, Manuel B. 2017. “The variegated financialization of housing”. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 41(4), 542-554. https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-2427.12522
Attoh, Kafui, Wells, Kattie, y Cullen, Declan. 2019. “’We’re building their data’: Labor, alienation, and idiocy in the smart city”. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 37(6), 1007-1024.
https://doi.org/10.1177/0263775819856626
Barns, Sarah. 2019. Platform urbanism: negotiating platform ecosystems in connected cities. Londres: Springer Nature.
Barron, Kyle, Kung, Edward, y Proserpio, Davide. 2018. “The Sharing Economy and Housing Affordability: Evidence from Airbnb”. ACM Conference on Economics and Computation, 5. https://doi.org/10.1145/3219166.3219180
Bates, Lisa K., Zwick, Austin, Spicer, Zachary, Kerzhner, Tamara, Kim, Anna Joo, Baber, Ashley, Green, Jamaal W., y moulden, dominic t. 2019. “Gigs, Side Hustles, Freelance: What Work Means in the Platform Economy City/ Blight or Remedy: Understanding Ridehailing’s Role in the Precarious “Gig Economy”/ Labour, Gender and Making Rent with Airbnb/ The Gentrification of ‘Sharing’: From Bandit Cab to Ride Share Tech/ The ‘Sharing Economy’? Precarious Labor in Neoliberal Cities/ Where Is Economic Development in the Platform City?/ Shared Economy: WeWork or We Work Together”. Planning Theory y Practice, 20(3), 423-446
https://doi.org/10.1080/14649357.2019.1629197
Casilli, Antonio A. y Posada, Julian. 2019. “The platformization of labor and society”. En Society and the internet: How networks of information and communication are changing our lives, editado por Mark Graham y William H. Dutton, 293-306. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Centner, Ryan. 2008. “Places of Privileged Consumption Practices: Spatial Capital, the Dot–Com Habitus, and San Francisco’s Internet Boom”. City y Community, 7(3), 193-223. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1540-6040.2008.00258.x
Christophers, Brett. 2019. “Putting financialisation in its financial context: Transformations in local government-led urban development in post-financial crisis England”. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 44(3), 571-586. https://doi.org/10.1111/tran.12305
Fields, Desiree. 2022. “Automated landlord: Digital technologies and post-crisis financial accumulation”. Environment and Planning A, 54(1), 160–181. https://doi.org/10.1177/0308518X19846514
Fields, Desiree y Rogers, Dallas. 2021. “Towards a Critical Housing Studies Research Agenda on Platform Real Estate”. Housing, Theory and Society, 38(1), 72-94. https://doi.org/10.1080/14036096.2019.1670724
Harvey, David. 2007. Espacios del capital. Hacia una geografía crítica. Madrid: Akal.
Hollands, Robert. 2008. “Will the real smart city stand-up?”. City 12(3), 303–321. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13604810802479126
Kenney, Martin y Zysman, John. 2016. “The rise of the platform economy”. Issues in science and technology, 32(3), 61. https://issues.org/rise-platform-economy-big-data-work/
Kenney, Martin F., Zysman, John y Bearson, Dafna. 2020. “Transformation or structural change? What Polanyi can teach us about the platform economy”, What Polanyi Can Teach Us about the Platform Economy. Sociologica, 14(3), 227–240. https://doi.org/10.6092/issn.1971-8853/11475
Kitchin, Rob. 2014. “The real-time city? Big data and smart urbanism”. GeoJournal 79(1), 1–14. http://www.jstor.org/stable/24432611
March, Hug y Ribera-Fumaz, Ramon. 2016. “Smart contradictions: the politics of making Barcelona a self-sufficient city”. European Urban and Regional Studies, 23(4), 816-830. https://doi.org/10.1177/0969776414554488
Mermet, Anne-Cécile. 2022. “Can gentrification theory learn from Airbnb? Airbnbfication and the asset economy in Reykjavík”. Environment and Planning A, 54(6), 1147–1164. https://doi.org/10.1177/0308518X221094616
Mezzadra, Sandro y Neilson, Brett. 2017. “On the multiple frontiers of extraction: Excavating contemporary capitalism”. Cultural Studies, 31(2/3), 185–240. https://doi.org/10.1080/09502386.2017.1303425
Nieborg, David B. y Poell, Thomas. 2018, “The platformization of cultural production: Theorizing the contingent cultural commodity”. New Media y Society, 20 (11), 4.275-4.292. https://doi.org/10.1177/1461444818769694
Peck, Jamie y Phillips, Rachel. 2020. “The platform conjuncture”. Sociologica 14 (3), 73-99. https://doi.org/10.6092/issn.1971-8853/11613
Pollio, Andrea. 2021. “Uber, airports, and labour at the infrastructural interfaces of platform urbanism”. Geoforum 118, 47-55.
Rosen, Jovanna, y Álvarez León, Luis F. 2022. “The Digital Growth Machine: Urban Change and the Ideology of Technology”. Annals of the American Association of Geographers, 112(8), 2248-2265.
https://doi.org/10.1080/24694452.2022.2052008
Sadowski, Jathan. 2020. “The internet of landlords: Digital platforms and new mechanisms of rentier capitalism”. Antipode, 52(2), 562-580. https://doi.org/10.1111/anti.12595
Sequera, Jorge (Coord.) 2024. La ciudad de las plataformas. Transformaciones urbanas en la era del capitalismo digital. Barcelona: Editorial Icaria
Sequera, Jorge, y Gil, Javier. 2023. “Ciudad APP: Transformación urbana y capitalismo de plataforma”. Empiria: Revista de metodología de ciencias sociales, (59), 15-21. https://doi.org/10.5944/empiria.59.2023.38176
Schor, Juliet B. y Attwood-Charles, William. 2017. “The ‘sharing’ economy: Labor, inequality, and social connection on for-profit platforms”. Sociology Compass, 11(8), e12493. https://doi.org/10.1111/soc4.12493
Schor, Juliet B., Attwood-Charles, William, Cansoy, Mehmet, Ladegaard, Isak, y Wengronowitz, Robert. 2020. “Dependence and precarity in the platform economy”. Theory and Society, 49, 833-861. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11186-020-09408-y
Srnicek, Nick. 2017. Platform capitalism. NJ: John Wiley y Sons.
Stark, David, y Pais, Ivana. 2020. Algorithmic management in the platform economy. Sociologica, 14(3), 47-72. https://doi.org/10.6092/issn.1971-8853/12221
Törnberg, Petter. 2022. “Platform placemaking and the digital urban culture of Airbnbification”, Urban Transformations, 4(3).
https://doi.org/10.1186/s42854-022-00032-w
Vallas, Steven y Schor, Juliet B. 2020. “What do platforms do? Understanding the gig economy”. Annual Review of Sociology, 46, 273-294.
https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-soc-121919-054857
Van Dijck, José; Poell, Thomas y De Waal, Martijn. 2018. The platform society: Public values in a connective world. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Zukin, Sharon. 2021. “Planetary Silicon Valley: deconstructing New York’s innovation complex”. Urban Studies, 58(1), 3-35.
https://doi.org/10.1177/0042098020951421
Zysman, John y Kenney, Martin. 2018. “The next phase in the digital revolution: intelligent tools, platforms, growth, employment”, Communications of the ACM, 61(2), 54-63. https://doi.org/10.1145/3173550
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2024 Jorge Sequera, Ismael Yrigoy, Pablo Martínez, María Barrero
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Los autores que publican en esta revista están de acuerdo con los siguientes términos:
- Los autores conservan los derechos de autoría y otorgan a la revista el derecho de primera publicación, cin la obra disponible simultáneamente bajo una Licéncia de Atribución Compartir igual de Creative Commons que permite compartir la obra con terceros, siempre que estos reconozcan la autoría y la publicación inicial en esta revista.
- Los autores son libres de realizar acuerdos contractuales adicionales independientes para la distribución no exclusiva de la versió de la obra publicada en la revista (com por ejemplo la publicación en un repositorio institucional o en un libro), siempre que se reconozca la publicación inicial en esta revista.