Infrastructuring platform delivery work: exclusions, coercionsand resistance in delivery platforms’ migrant work in Bogotá,Colombia

  • Oscar Javier Maldonado Castaneda
  • , Derly Yohanna Sánchez Vargas
  • , Sandra Milena Agudelo Londoño
  • , Mabel Rocío Hernández Díaz
  • , Luis Jorge Hernández Flórez
  • , Laura Clemencia Mantilla-León
  • , Zully Bibiana Suárez

Research output: Contribution to JournalResearch Articlepeer-review

Abstract

This paper analyses the experiences of Venezuelan migrant workers in Colombia as Rappi couriers. Rappi is a “work-on-demand via app,” founded in 2015 in Colombia, that links clients with nearby restaurants and stores through a couriers’ network. Drawing on STS (Science and Technology Studies) scholarship on labor and infrastructures, we explore the ways in which migrant workers interact with Rappi algorithmic, material and legal infrastructures, the coercion and violence they experience, and the tactics and solidarities that they create to make a living. We understood migration as a domination relation within gig workers, an approach that allows us to identify specific exclusions that migrant couriers suffer in an already precarious local labor market. Methodologically, we have developed an Ethnography for the Internet conducted during the COVID-19 pandemic through three different sources and interaction layers: WhatsApp and Facebook non-participant observation and exploratory interviews with Rappi migrant workers. In what follows, we offer a theoretical analysis of the intersections between migration and the gig economy infrastructures based on the Colombian case. Navigating the experiences of migrant gig workers with Rappi, we discuss the dynamics of inclusion-exclusion they live in their interaction with the platform and the infrastructures that support and constitute their work.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number2343161
Pages (from-to)1
Number of pages20
JournalTapuya: Latin American Science, Technology and Society
Volume7
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 4 2024

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Sociology and Political Science

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Infrastructuring platform delivery work: exclusions, coercionsand resistance in delivery platforms’ migrant work in Bogotá,Colombia'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this