sponsored
Making the Gig Economy Work for Workers
The gig economy has upended the traditional employer-employee relationship and informalized work globally. Now workers around the world are pushing back.
The gig economy has upended the traditional employer-employee relationship and informalized work globally. Now workers around the world are pushing back.
Technology is driving advancements in the workplace, but it’s imperative for companies to invest in workers to make progress on social and business goals.
Data is power, and rideshare drivers are at a disadvantage when corporations keep them in the dark. Driver’s Seat Cooperative is working to give data and power back to workers.
Ahead of SSIR’s 2023 Data on Purpose conference, Making Tech Work for Workers, here’s a collection of articles and books exploring the risks of tech innovation and what is needed to build a better, more worker-centered digital economy.
This two-day open-access virtual conference we will bring together some of the sharpest minds in this field to explore the risks of tech innovation that fails to serve labor, and envision what is needed to build a better, more worker-centered digital economy.
Access this webinarOf work, weasels, and employee engagement in the nonprofit sector.
By combining a business ecosystem approach with collective impact, a South Korean initiative is battling late-life poverty and putting valuable professional knowledge back to work.
India’s first and largest waste-picker cooperative has inspired community-wide recycling and sustainable living.