Online Resistance to Precarious Archaeological Labour

The international cultural heritage economy has long been underpinned by a reserve army of unemployed/underemployed labour. The entry-level workforce is being further undermined and unpaid/underpaid labour is additionally being consolidated through the crisis and austerity measures. Independently an...

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Main Author: Sam Hardy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of York 2015-05-01
Series:Internet Archaeology
Subjects:
UK
Online Access:http://intarch.ac.uk/journal/issue39/4/index.html
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spelling doaj-304b2f91ac744f8985af6246b8fe97d12020-11-25T00:19:01ZengUniversity of YorkInternet Archaeology1363-53872015-05-013910.11141/ia.39.4 Online Resistance to Precarious Archaeological LabourSam Hardy0UCL Institute of ArchaeologyThe international cultural heritage economy has long been underpinned by a reserve army of unemployed/underemployed labour. The entry-level workforce is being further undermined and unpaid/underpaid labour is additionally being consolidated through the crisis and austerity measures. Independently and under different pressures, archaeologists across Europe have begun to use blogging, micro-blogging and other social media in concerted national efforts to document, analyse and resist exploitative and exclusive employment practices. This article focuses on the development of movements against unpaid labour (free archaeology) in the UK, against unpaid and underpaid internship (volontariato and stage) in Italy, and for employment (istihdam) in Turkey. Using insights gained through observing and participating in these movements, and through running a research blog on precarious labour in the cultural heritage industry, this article examines the benefits and limits of blogging/micro-blogging as a tool for debate within the profession, communication with the public, and activism. http://intarch.ac.uk/journal/issue39/4/index.htmllabouremploymentsocial mediaresistanceItalyTurkeyUK
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sam Hardy
spellingShingle Sam Hardy
Online Resistance to Precarious Archaeological Labour
Internet Archaeology
labour
employment
social media
resistance
Italy
Turkey
UK
author_facet Sam Hardy
author_sort Sam Hardy
title Online Resistance to Precarious Archaeological Labour
title_short Online Resistance to Precarious Archaeological Labour
title_full Online Resistance to Precarious Archaeological Labour
title_fullStr Online Resistance to Precarious Archaeological Labour
title_full_unstemmed Online Resistance to Precarious Archaeological Labour
title_sort online resistance to precarious archaeological labour
publisher University of York
series Internet Archaeology
issn 1363-5387
publishDate 2015-05-01
description The international cultural heritage economy has long been underpinned by a reserve army of unemployed/underemployed labour. The entry-level workforce is being further undermined and unpaid/underpaid labour is additionally being consolidated through the crisis and austerity measures. Independently and under different pressures, archaeologists across Europe have begun to use blogging, micro-blogging and other social media in concerted national efforts to document, analyse and resist exploitative and exclusive employment practices. This article focuses on the development of movements against unpaid labour (free archaeology) in the UK, against unpaid and underpaid internship (volontariato and stage) in Italy, and for employment (istihdam) in Turkey. Using insights gained through observing and participating in these movements, and through running a research blog on precarious labour in the cultural heritage industry, this article examines the benefits and limits of blogging/micro-blogging as a tool for debate within the profession, communication with the public, and activism.
topic labour
employment
social media
resistance
Italy
Turkey
UK
url http://intarch.ac.uk/journal/issue39/4/index.html
work_keys_str_mv AT samhardy onlineresistancetoprecariousarchaeologicallabour
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