1. The Creeping Uberization of Work
1.1 What is the Digital Gig Economy?
1.2 Post-Workerism and the Struggle for Workers’ Autonomy
1.3 Toward Convivial Autonomy in the Digital Gig Economy
2. Governing the Workforce: From the Factory to the Digital Gig Economy
2.1 The Industrial Factory under Fordism
2.2 The Age of Post-Fordism
2.3 The Role of Digital Technology in the Post-Fordist Corporation
2.4 Conclusion
3. Exploitation and the Capture of Social Cooperation
3.1 Against the “Free Labour”-Thesis
3.2 The Becoming-Rent of Profit
3.3 Digital Capture and Enclave Rent
3.4 Digital Capture and Financial Rent
3.5 Conclusion
4. Alienation in the Platform Economy
4.1 The Ambivalence of the General Intellect
4.2 Alienation and the General Intellect
4.3 Conclusion
5. The Human Limits to Growth
5.1 Marx on the Problem of Fatigue
5.2 Digital Connection and Fatigue in the Digital Gig Economy
5.3 The Hidden Abode of Social Reproduction
5.4 Conclusion
6. Workers’ Autonomy as Self-Valorisation?
6.1 Autonomy as Self-Valorisation
6.2 Objections to Negri’s Notion of Workers’ Autonomy
6.3 Conclusion
7. Workers’ Autonomy as Conviviality
7.1 Ivan Illich as a Degrowth Thinker
7.2 Illich’s Critique of Modern Technology
7.3 Toward a Definition of Convivial Autonomy
7.4 Conclusion
8. Towards Convivial Platform Labour
8.1 Rekindling the Promise of the Sharing Economy
8.2 Preliminary Criticisms
8.3 Fostering a Community of Platform Artisans
8.4 Workers’ Independence and Labour Rights
8.5 Collective Self-Determination and the Library of Basic Protocols
8.6 Resonance and Grassroots Solidarities
8.7 Coda