In the abstract, platform work is the matching of supply and demand for paid work through an online platform. In practice, most people are likely to have encountered it through big online platforms such as Uber, Deliveroo or Amazon Mechanical Turk. This is a new form employment that began to emerge in Europe about a decade ago.
New forms of employment
- Published between
- 12 Март 2015 - 2 Декември 2021
This series reports on the new forms of employment emerging across Europe that are driven by societal, economic and technological developments and are different from traditional standard or non-standard employment in a number of ways. This series explores what characterises these new employment forms and what implications they have for working conditions and the labour market.
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Publications
- Report24 Септември 2018
Platform work is a form of employment that uses an online platform to match the supply of and demand for paid labour. In Europe, platform work is still small in scale but is rapidly developing. The types of work offered through platforms are ever-increasing, as are the challenges for existing regulatory frameworks. This report explores the working and employment conditions of three of the most common types of platform work in Europe.
- Customised report25 Јули 2018
Across Europe, new forms of employment are emerging that differ significantly from traditional employment. Some of these forms of employment transform the relationship between employer and employee while others change work organisation and work patterns.
- Blog6 Јуни 2018
Digital technologies are transforming work, but the implications have not yet been fully grasped. In a recent Eurofound report, we focus on three main vectors of change to discuss the effects of digital technologies on work and employment and the policy responses such change demands.
- Report24 Мај 2018
The onset of the digital revolution has resulted in technological advances that are constantly evolving. A key element of concern to policymakers is the impact that these changes will have on the world of work and employment. This report reviews the history of the digital revolution to date, placing it in the context of other periods of marked technological advances and examining how technological change interacts with changes in institutions. Digital technologies have considerable disruptive potential, including making production much more flexible and information more readily available.
- Customised report13 Септември 2017
This report examines developments in non-standard employment over the last decade. It looks at trends in the main categories of non-standard employment – temporary, temporary agency and part-time work and self-employment – based mainly on data from the European Union Labour Force Survey. It discusses some aspects of the labour market situation of workers in these categories including wages and the extent to which they would prefer a standard employment status.
- Report15 Февруари 2017
New information and communications technologies have revolutionised work and life in the 21st century. The constant connectivity enabled by these devices allows work to be performed at any time and from almost anywhere. This joint report by the ILO and Eurofound synthesises the findings of national studies from 15 countries, plus the European Working Conditions Survey, to consider the effects of telework and ICT-mobile work (T/ICTM) on the world of work.
- Report21 Ноември 2016
Although standard employment is still dominant in European labour markets, an increasing range of new employment forms is emerging that differ in their implications for working conditions. This study explores strategic employee sharing, an employment form for companies that have specific HR needs that do not justify a permanent full-time position, but are often recurring, by hiring one or several workers who work on assignments, and whose skills and time are shared among a group of companies.
- Report12 Март 2015
Across Europe, new forms of employment are emerging that are different from traditional standard or non-standard employment in a number of ways. Some transform the relationship between employer and employee, some change work organisation and work patterns, and some do both. This report identifies nine forms of employment that are new or have become increasingly important in Europe since the year 2000.
Non-standard employment, New forms of employment, Platform work, Working conditions and sustainable work, Working conditions, Undeclared work, Work organisation, Employment relationship, Employment and labour markets, Anticipating and managing the impact of change, Digitalisation, Inclusive labour markets, Innovation
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Working papers
- Author(s)
- Number of pages
- 13
- Reference no.
- WPEF15001
- Author(s)
- Flipo, Aurore; Turlan, Frédéric
- Number of pages
- 7
- Reference no.
- WPEF15017
- Author(s)
- Rosenvinge Ervik, Marthe
- Number of pages
- 9
- Reference no.
- WPEF15033
- Author(s)
- Number of pages
- 11
- Reference no.
- WPEF15049
- Author(s)
- Number of pages
- 20
- Reference no.
- WPEF15065
- Author(s)
- Number of pages
- 18
- Reference no.
- WPEF15002
- Author(s)
- Flipo, Aurore
- Number of pages
- 11
- Reference no.
- WPEF15018
- Author(s)
- Number of pages
- 9
- Reference no.
- WPEF15034
- Author(s)
- Number of pages
- 12
- Reference no.
- WPEF15050
- Author(s)
- Number of pages
- 12
- Reference no.
- WPEF15066
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