Aloisi Antonio, DE Stefano Valerio
IE Law School IE University Madrid.
Osgoode Hall Law School York University Toronto.
Int Labour Rev. 2022 Jun;161(2):289-314. doi: 10.1111/ilr.12219. Epub 2022 May 27.
An unprecedented COVID-19-induced explosion in digital surveillance has reconfigured power relationships in professional settings. This article critically concentrates on the interplay between technology-enabled intrusive monitoring and the augmentation of managerial prerogatives in physical and digital workplaces. It identifies excessive supervision as the common denominator of "essential" and "remotable" activities, besides discussing the various drawbacks faced by the two categories of workers during (and after) the pandemic. It also assesses the adequacy of the current European Union legal framework in addressing the expansion of data-driven management. Social dialogue, workers' empowerment and digital literacy are identified as effective ways to promote organizational flexibility, well-being and competitiveness.
由新冠疫情引发的前所未有的数字监控激增,重新塑造了职业环境中的权力关系。本文批判性地聚焦于技术支持的侵入性监控与实体及数字工作场所中管理特权增强之间的相互作用。除了讨论这两类工人在疫情期间(及之后)面临的各种弊端外,它还将过度监督视为“必要”和“可远程完成”活动的共同特征。它还评估了当前欧盟法律框架在应对数据驱动型管理扩张方面的充分性。社会对话、工人赋权和数字素养被视为促进组织灵活性、福祉和竞争力的有效途径。