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In October 2016, in Turin, northern Italy, cycle couriers working for the German food delivery Foodora staged a series of public protests which quickly attracted considerable media and became known as the first case of workers’ mobilisation in the Italian ‘gig economy’. protests sparked a lively debate in Italian public opinion about working conditions in the -called ‘gig’ or ‘on-demand’ economy. However, the debate remains confused by the ambiguous of these terms, often conflated with unrelated concepts such as that of the ‘sharing ’ (Blanchard, 2015; Drahokoupil and Fabo, 2016) ; and by the as yet limited understanding what these ‘new’ work organisation forms entail for the evolution of employment practices (Eurofound, 2015; Valenduc and Vendramin, 2016) and for the possibilities of workers’ collective. Analysing the case of the Foodora riders’ mobilisation in Italy thus offers a timely to reflect on the current challenges facing the labour movement, in Italy and in Europe, the brave new world of the ‘gig economy’.
Tassinari et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
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