The Everyday (In)visibility of Ride-hailing Platform drivers: Understanding Gig Informality in the Urban Space of Chandigarh Capital Region, India
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Abstract
The shift from a market-based society to a platform-driven society is a complex and contested
socio-spatial process. My dissertation examines the intricacies of this shift- the everyday
contestations surrounding platformization, with particular emphasis on the socio-spatial dynamics
affecting ride-hailing platform drivers in the Chandigarh Capital Region (CCR) of India. Urban
space is central to reproducing power structures and producing varied experiences among ride
hailing platform drivers. In this study by examining small-scale geographies and micro-processes,
I attempt to bring together technology, labour, and urban space to demonstrate how new digital
processes are reshaping the daily lived and embodied experiences of ride-hailing platform drivers
in the urban landscape. Additionally, the research aims to explore how these gig drivers co
produce urban space. The central objective of this dissertation is to understand the transforming
notions of ‘labour’, ‘precarity,’ ‘gender’, and ‘socialities of the work experience’. Through this
thesis, I aim to bring to the fore the voice of ‘platform labour’ in the public discourse as valuable
contributions to knowledge production and further emphasise the embedding of gig platforms in
the regulatory framework of society perceiving gig work to be the future of work. To delve into
the lives of ride-hailing platform drivers, the dissertation draws on multiple qualitative data sources
including semi-structured interviews, focus group discussions, WhatsApp chat messages, field
notes, letters, and newspaper archives. The research moves fluidly between physical and virtual
spaces, acknowledging that the lives of these workers cannot be fully understood without
considering how digital technologies intersect with their physical realities. Therefore, by engaging
with interdisciplinary work in labour geography, urban studies and digital labour, the thesis
provides a critical framework for understanding urban socio-spatial relations with particular
attention to transformations connected to the rise of the gig platform economy. The study reveals
that existing relations of precarity are ‘invisibilized’ even as they extend onto the platform
economy while highlighting the social lives of ride-hailing drivers, which play a crucial role in
their resilience and adaptability within the gig economy. The study also highlights the gendered
relations that unfold in a city through ride-hailing platforms.