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The plat-formalisation fallacy

Mallett, Richard (2025) The plat-formalisation fallacy. Environment and Planning A. ISSN 0308-518X

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Identification Number: 10.1177/0308518X251374649

Abstract

It is often assumed that despite contributing towards the ongoing casualisation of work across the global North, in Southern contexts of already-high labour informality the expansion of the global platform economy is conversely helping to formalise people’s work. A process, as it were, of ‘plat-formalisation’. Drawing on original case study material from Uganda’s motorcycle-taxi sector, this article responds to recent calls within the field of critical platform scholarship for more ‘theory from’ the South by carrying out a grounded investigation of the relationship between processes of platformisation and dynamics of in/formalisation. In contrast to prevailing ideas about the formalising properties of digital labour platforms in such settings, it clearly shows that inclusion within the ride-hail platform economy brings moto-taxi riders no closer to formal status in any meaningful way. Despite early collaborative engagement with state actors, Uganda’s ride-hail platforms operate in unilateral, platform-specific ways that undermine prospects for sectoral standardisation, accept zero legal responsibility for the welfare and safety of those labouring/transacting through their apps, and exhibit reluctance to enhance the political legibility of the rider workforce through data-sharing with government. But more than this: by manufacturing what this article terms an ‘aesthetics of formality’, the platformisation of Uganda’s moto-taxis also enables the conduct of commercial activity beneath the surface, culminating in a dynamic that sees the economic value created by (still-)informal workers captured by formal private enterprise. Seen through this particular Southern lens, the conventional logics of plat-formalisation quickly start to come unstuck.

Item Type: Article
Additional Information: © 2025 The Author(s)
Divisions: International Development
Subjects: H Social Sciences > HD Industries. Land use. Labor
Date Deposited: 20 Aug 2025 11:03
Last Modified: 06 Oct 2025 16:03
URI: http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/id/eprint/129168

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