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Project

Microwork and Virtual Production Networks in Sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia
 

Far East Asia
Project ID
107384
Total Funding
CAD 468,600.00
IDRC Officer
Ellie Osir
Project Status
Completed
End Date
Duration
36 months

Programs and partnerships

Networked Economies

Lead institution(s)

Project leader:
Dr. Mark Graham
United Kingdom

Summary

As use of the Internet and mobile technologies in the developing world continues to grow at a high rate, there is potential to provide real income opportunities to poor and unskilled workers.Read more

As use of the Internet and mobile technologies in the developing world continues to grow at a high rate, there is potential to provide real income opportunities to poor and unskilled workers. Microwork and new virtual job opportunities in the digital economy include: -moderating content posted to social media sites; -categorizing products in online shops; or, -translating online content into other languages. A recent World Bank study estimates that the market for microwork is worth approximately $3 billion a year, and it suggests that even the least-developed countries could benefit from this emerging virtual economy. Private and donor-funded initiatives are experimenting with these new Internet-enabled business models and tapping into an affordable labour force in developing countries to service customers in more developed economies. These models are also referred to as "paid crowdsourcing." Amazon's Mechanical Turk, for example, enables workers to choose and perform simple tasks online, report directly through the online platform, and receive payments in exchange. A task can be as simple as labelling photos or writing product descriptions and reviews. Other examples include businesses such as Samasource, oDesk, and microWorkers that have realized that entry-level workers can be efficient and effective. Anyone with access to the Internet can seek these employment opportunities. This project will explore this emerging phenomenon and the potential offered by virtual production networks in sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia. More specifically, the research team will: -examine how virtual production networks in Africa and Asia are structured; -assess their positive and negative effects on workers; -explore the factors that would mitigate the negative effects and increase the potential of positive effects; -provide opportunities for exchange with policymakers and practitioners; and, -inform programs that seek to unleash the developmental potential of virtual work activities. The Oxford Internet Institute and the University of Pretoria will collaborate to investigate virtual production models in sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia. The research team will seek to better understand how they function. They will look at the positives and negatives for workers, and establish solutions to mitigate the negative effects. Finally, the project will fill evidence-based knowledge gaps in this area, and inform investments and practice in the future.

Research outputs

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Book
Language:

English

Summary

Many of the world’s most valuable companies rely on planetary networks of digital work that underpin their products and services. This important book examines implications for both work and workers when jobs are commodified and traded beyond local labor markets. For instance, Amazon’s contractors in Costa Rica, India, and Romania are paid to structure, annotate, and organize conversations captured by ‘Alexa’ to train Amazon’s speech recognition systems. Findings show that despite its planetary connections, labor remains geographically “sticky” and embedded in distinct contexts. The research emphasizes the globe-spanning nature of contemporary networks without resorting to an understanding of “the global” as a place beyond space.

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