1 00:00:15,860 --> 00:00:18,020 One of the central tasks of this course 2 00:00:18,020 --> 00:00:21,400 has been to unpack the ways in which work in today's economy 3 00:00:21,400 --> 00:00:23,310 has changed over time. 4 00:00:23,310 --> 00:00:25,980 Often, when we talk about this topic, 5 00:00:25,980 --> 00:00:28,120 one of the first things that comes to mind 6 00:00:28,120 --> 00:00:31,410 is the role of technology in transforming work. 7 00:00:31,410 --> 00:00:35,270 Over the past few years, we have seen an explosion in what's 8 00:00:35,270 --> 00:00:37,300 known as the on-demand economy. 9 00:00:37,300 --> 00:00:39,180 It's visible everywhere. 10 00:00:39,180 --> 00:00:42,530 We as consumers are able to have our food delivered, 11 00:00:42,530 --> 00:00:46,200 grab a ride home, or even have someone run their errands, 12 00:00:46,200 --> 00:00:48,970 all purchased and arranged in a matter of minutes 13 00:00:48,970 --> 00:00:51,490 from our smartphones. 14 00:00:51,490 --> 00:00:53,090 Our colleague John McCarthy talks 15 00:00:53,090 --> 00:00:54,690 in more detail about these new ways 16 00:00:54,690 --> 00:00:56,990 of organizing work in a different video 17 00:00:56,990 --> 00:00:58,590 lecture in this course. 18 00:00:58,590 --> 00:01:00,770 What we're going to talk about now 19 00:01:00,770 --> 00:01:02,700 is how these employment arrangements 20 00:01:02,700 --> 00:01:04,790 are connected to two issues-- 21 00:01:04,790 --> 00:01:07,120 one, how we think about workers' rights 22 00:01:07,120 --> 00:01:11,440 in the on-demand economy, and two, how technology can promote 23 00:01:11,440 --> 00:01:15,230 new forms of worker advocacy in settings where gigs, 24 00:01:15,230 --> 00:01:17,600 not full-time jobs for one employer, 25 00:01:17,600 --> 00:01:21,200 are becoming the employment norm. 26 00:01:21,200 --> 00:01:23,690 Many consumers and workers alike find 27 00:01:23,690 --> 00:01:26,970 the flexibility and efficiency of the on-demand economy 28 00:01:26,970 --> 00:01:28,420 to be beneficial. 29 00:01:28,420 --> 00:01:31,270 Work hours are flexible, for instance, 30 00:01:31,270 --> 00:01:35,000 and the efficiency of services saves people time. 31 00:01:35,000 --> 00:01:38,740 As has been pointed out, however, many workers 32 00:01:38,740 --> 00:01:41,500 undertaking the actual jobs of these companies 33 00:01:41,500 --> 00:01:44,130 are employed as independent contractors, 34 00:01:44,130 --> 00:01:47,690 meaning that they are not direct employees of the company that 35 00:01:47,690 --> 00:01:51,190 is bringing us the good or the service. 36 00:01:51,190 --> 00:01:54,220 A babysitter who gets his work through the website Care.com, 37 00:01:54,220 --> 00:01:57,190 for instance, is considered to be self-employed. 38 00:01:57,190 --> 00:02:00,640 This means that the benefits and protections that we associate 39 00:02:00,640 --> 00:02:04,450 with full time, stable jobs, such as access to paid leave 40 00:02:04,450 --> 00:02:06,680 or unemployment insurance, are not 41 00:02:06,680 --> 00:02:09,060 available to on-demand workers. 42 00:02:09,060 --> 00:02:12,310 Likewise, standards that promote good, quality jobs 43 00:02:12,310 --> 00:02:15,060 are often absent from these arrangements, 44 00:02:15,060 --> 00:02:16,900 as we've seen through the recent protests 45 00:02:16,900 --> 00:02:19,530 by Uber drivers over wages and terms of work 46 00:02:19,530 --> 00:02:22,900 in various cities. 47 00:02:22,900 --> 00:02:25,990 So the traditional system of benefits and protections 48 00:02:25,990 --> 00:02:28,810 based on full time jobs and employment status 49 00:02:28,810 --> 00:02:31,300 no longer makes sense in these settings. 50 00:02:31,300 --> 00:02:33,620 Innovative, disruptive technologies 51 00:02:33,620 --> 00:02:36,820 that change the way business is done and work is performed 52 00:02:36,820 --> 00:02:40,020 require simultaneous innovative changes 53 00:02:40,020 --> 00:02:43,150 in how workers are able to access rights on the job. 54 00:02:43,150 --> 00:02:45,320 What we've talked about in this course 55 00:02:45,320 --> 00:02:48,580 is updating the social contract at work. 56 00:02:48,580 --> 00:02:51,090 One approach to such change comes with support 57 00:02:51,090 --> 00:02:54,340 from a broad coalition of technology firms, labor 58 00:02:54,340 --> 00:02:57,560 organizations, academics, and foundations. 59 00:02:57,560 --> 00:02:59,680 The idea is pretty simple-- 60 00:02:59,680 --> 00:03:01,490 that benefits and protections should 61 00:03:01,490 --> 00:03:03,910 accrue with the work being performed, 62 00:03:03,910 --> 00:03:05,770 no matter the employer. 63 00:03:05,770 --> 00:03:09,080 In other words, the number of sick days, for instance, 64 00:03:09,080 --> 00:03:12,490 a gig worker can accrue should depend on the number of hours 65 00:03:12,490 --> 00:03:17,320 she works, whether providing rides or delivering groceries. 66 00:03:17,320 --> 00:03:19,580 Although firms would contribute to these benefits 67 00:03:19,580 --> 00:03:21,810 and protections, they would essentially 68 00:03:21,810 --> 00:03:25,440 remain with the worker, allowing for economic security 69 00:03:25,440 --> 00:03:28,120 even when working for multiple employers. 70 00:03:28,120 --> 00:03:31,220 They can be structured in a way that promotes good jobs that 71 00:03:31,220 --> 00:03:32,800 pay living wages. 72 00:03:32,800 --> 00:03:36,160 And by making these portable benefits universal, 73 00:03:36,160 --> 00:03:39,600 they can also extend to workers beyond the on-demand economy, 74 00:03:39,600 --> 00:03:42,840 helping ease the now-commonplace transitions that many of us 75 00:03:42,840 --> 00:03:47,740 experience moving from one employer to the next. 76 00:03:47,740 --> 00:03:50,080 The idea of portable benefits mimics 77 00:03:50,080 --> 00:03:52,180 these new on-demand arrangements that 78 00:03:52,180 --> 00:03:55,190 characterize growing portions of the economy. 79 00:03:55,190 --> 00:03:57,970 Likewise, advocates are also finding new ways 80 00:03:57,970 --> 00:04:01,440 to use technology to promote workers' rights on the job. 81 00:04:01,440 --> 00:04:05,250 In some cases, this is directly relevant to on-demand workers 82 00:04:05,250 --> 00:04:07,460 themselves. 83 00:04:07,460 --> 00:04:11,580 Relatively new websites, such as coworker.org and Dynamo, 84 00:04:11,580 --> 00:04:13,670 serve as online hubs where workers 85 00:04:13,670 --> 00:04:16,980 can start petitions for change, rate their experience 86 00:04:16,980 --> 00:04:19,130 with certain employers, and connect 87 00:04:19,130 --> 00:04:20,810 with others in their industry. 88 00:04:20,810 --> 00:04:23,170 Turkopticon is a similar application 89 00:04:23,170 --> 00:04:26,400 that allows crowd workers on Amazon's Mechanical Turk 90 00:04:26,400 --> 00:04:28,420 to rate employers. 91 00:04:28,420 --> 00:04:30,980 These applications compliment organizing efforts 92 00:04:30,980 --> 00:04:32,520 in other settings as well. 93 00:04:32,520 --> 00:04:35,440 In our last video, we talked about Our Walmart, 94 00:04:35,440 --> 00:04:38,880 an organization of non-unionized Walmart workers 95 00:04:38,880 --> 00:04:41,620 advocating for better working conditions. 96 00:04:41,620 --> 00:04:45,140 Using an online campaign through coworker.org, 97 00:04:45,140 --> 00:04:48,880 Our Walmart was recently able to gather widespread support 98 00:04:48,880 --> 00:04:51,860 for their demands regarding more stable hours. 99 00:04:51,860 --> 00:04:56,530 In response, Walmart changed the way they schedule shifts. 100 00:04:56,530 --> 00:04:58,690 With support from an innovative organization 101 00:04:58,690 --> 00:05:01,600 called the Workers Lab, which promotes new forms of worker 102 00:05:01,600 --> 00:05:04,930 organizing, Our Walmart is also developing 103 00:05:04,930 --> 00:05:08,490 an app that allows workers to connect with one another while 104 00:05:08,490 --> 00:05:11,060 receiving peer-generated advice and training 105 00:05:11,060 --> 00:05:13,260 relevant to their jobs. 106 00:05:13,260 --> 00:05:16,480 Other organizations are developing applications 107 00:05:16,480 --> 00:05:19,520 that not only serve to connect workers and mobilize 108 00:05:19,520 --> 00:05:23,100 around specific demands, but also to inform and educate 109 00:05:23,100 --> 00:05:25,290 workers about their rights on the job. 110 00:05:25,290 --> 00:05:27,590 The Domestic Worker app, for example, 111 00:05:27,590 --> 00:05:30,880 was created in response to the passage of a domestic worker 112 00:05:30,880 --> 00:05:33,100 bill of rights in New York state. 113 00:05:33,100 --> 00:05:37,300 Caregivers, nannies, and cleaners can call in or text 114 00:05:37,300 --> 00:05:40,680 to access both recorded and live informational episodes 115 00:05:40,680 --> 00:05:43,410 and messages about their rights under the state's 116 00:05:43,410 --> 00:05:45,730 new legislation. 117 00:05:45,730 --> 00:05:48,240 A different approach is taken by the Restaurant Opportunity 118 00:05:48,240 --> 00:05:50,850 Center, the organization of restaurant workers 119 00:05:50,850 --> 00:05:52,750 we discussed in our last video. 120 00:05:52,750 --> 00:05:55,700 The center's Top Server app is a game 121 00:05:55,700 --> 00:05:58,050 that teaches its users about the skills needed 122 00:05:58,050 --> 00:06:01,730 to advance in restaurants, imparting training, knowledge, 123 00:06:01,730 --> 00:06:04,050 and even the lingo used in restaurant work 124 00:06:04,050 --> 00:06:07,080 to servers looking for ways to advance in the industry. 125 00:06:07,080 --> 00:06:09,500 To be clear, these new forms of advocacy 126 00:06:09,500 --> 00:06:12,310 are not a replacement for direct work or organizing 127 00:06:12,310 --> 00:06:14,060 and other advocacy work. 128 00:06:14,060 --> 00:06:16,880 But as these organizations show, the types 129 00:06:16,880 --> 00:06:19,600 of technologies that are transforming the way we work 130 00:06:19,600 --> 00:06:21,920 can also be used to strengthen our efforts 131 00:06:21,920 --> 00:06:24,020 to create good jobs. 132 00:06:24,020 --> 00:06:26,410 And as the on-demand economy continues 133 00:06:26,410 --> 00:06:28,730 to be fueled by growing consumer demand, 134 00:06:28,730 --> 00:06:31,890 we will continue to be presented with opportunities 135 00:06:31,890 --> 00:06:34,320 for a potential innovation and re-establishing 136 00:06:34,320 --> 00:06:37,900 the social contract at work, not just for on-demand workers, 137 00:06:37,900 --> 00:06:40,460 but for all workers throughout the economy.