Brishen Rogers is a Professor of Law at Georgetown University Law Center. His recent scholarship has been published in leading law reviews including the Yale Law Journal, Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review, and the Texas Law Review. He has also written for the Boston Review, the New York Times, Onlabor.org, and the Law & Political Economy Blog, or lpeblog.org. Professor Rogers' scholarship has also been cited in landmark decisions by the California Supreme Court and the Court of Justice of the European Union.
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgments ix Introduction 1 1 Technology, the Service Transition, and the New Working Class 13 2 The Legal Construction of Workplace Neoliberalism 35 3 Inductive Knowledge and Digital Taylorism 57 4 Workplace Privacy and Associational Power 81 5 Data, Fissuring, and Consolidation 105 6 Data and Economic Democracy 131 Afterword: Law and the Technological Mundane 157 Notes 161 Selected Bibliography 239 Index 267
Acknowledgments ix Introduction 1 1 Technology, the Service Transition, and the New Working Class 13 2 The Legal Construction of Workplace Neoliberalism 35 3 Inductive Knowledge and Digital Taylorism 57 4 Workplace Privacy and Associational Power 81 5 Data, Fissuring, and Consolidation 105 6 Data and Economic Democracy 131 Afterword: Law and the Technological Mundane 157 Notes 161 Selected Bibliography 239 Index 267
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