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  1. It is seen as an investment that pays off for individuals based on merit, despite its deleterious impact on employment prospects in desired industries. Our theorization of hope labor can be seen as a complement or corrective to celebratory accounts of meaning making, creativity, and community in online social production." Categories: Labor.

  2. Abstract. "The notion of Free Digital Labor has emerged at the center of scientific debate with the advent of platform capitalism. This notion denotes the apparently free activity that users perform on digital platforms, producing, often unknowingly, data without any monetary remuneration. It is therefore particularly useful in signaling the ...

  3. Jess Scully: "Taiwan’s civic hackers were organized around a leaderless collective called g0v (pronounced “gov zero.”) Many believed in radical transparency, in throwing opaque processes open to the light, and in the idea that everyone who is affected by a decision should have a say in it. They preferred establishing consensus to running ...

  4. Bio. "Asst. Prof. Surat Horachaikul is a lecturer in the Department of International Relations, Faculty of Political Science, Chulalongkorn University and Director of the School for Wellbeing Studies and Research. He has master degrees from the London School of Economics and Political Science and from London Guildhall University. His recent ...

  5. = "tackling problems like global mobility, legal and efficient taxes whilst providing universal global health benefits, family / medical leave, and many more ...

  6. 2011年8月3日 · Description. Cognitive policy is about the values and ideas that both motivate the policy goals and that have to be uppermost in the minds of the public and the media in order for the policy to seem so much a matter of common sense that it will be readily accepted. Cognitive Policy Works is centrally concerned with the cognitive dimension of ...

  7. Hacker Movement as a Continuation of Labour Struggle. * Article: Dafermos, G. and J. Söderberg (2009) “The hacker movement as a continuation of labour struggle”. Class and Capital 97 (Spring). Categories:

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