From Frankenstein to Asimov: “predictive” literature, robotics and work

The Author focuses on the spreading of robotics, moving from an interesting Resolution of the European Parliament of 2017. Legal scholars seem to be mainly attracted by digitalisation, which implies the development of smart working and platform work governed by algorithms. The pervading impact of ro...

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Main Author: Donata Gottardi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Bologna 2018-12-01
Series:Labour & Law Issues
Subjects:
Online Access:https://labourlaw.unibo.it/article/view/8796
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spelling doaj-6d67d19e64394d9f92e1485148b62b602020-11-24T21:19:25ZengUniversity of BolognaLabour & Law Issues2421-26952018-12-014211310.6092/issn.2421-2695/87967635From Frankenstein to Asimov: “predictive” literature, robotics and workDonata Gottardi0Università di VeronaThe Author focuses on the spreading of robotics, moving from an interesting Resolution of the European Parliament of 2017. Legal scholars seem to be mainly attracted by digitalisation, which implies the development of smart working and platform work governed by algorithms. The pervading impact of robotics seems to imply fewer divergences from the traditional structure of labour law in terms of institutions and legal categories. However, it could determine even more radical changes, possibly approaching scenarios where only science fiction has been before.https://labourlaw.unibo.it/article/view/8796roboticsdigital employmentsmart workingcrowdworkalgorithms
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Donata Gottardi
spellingShingle Donata Gottardi
From Frankenstein to Asimov: “predictive” literature, robotics and work
Labour & Law Issues
robotics
digital employment
smart working
crowdwork
algorithms
author_facet Donata Gottardi
author_sort Donata Gottardi
title From Frankenstein to Asimov: “predictive” literature, robotics and work
title_short From Frankenstein to Asimov: “predictive” literature, robotics and work
title_full From Frankenstein to Asimov: “predictive” literature, robotics and work
title_fullStr From Frankenstein to Asimov: “predictive” literature, robotics and work
title_full_unstemmed From Frankenstein to Asimov: “predictive” literature, robotics and work
title_sort from frankenstein to asimov: “predictive” literature, robotics and work
publisher University of Bologna
series Labour & Law Issues
issn 2421-2695
publishDate 2018-12-01
description The Author focuses on the spreading of robotics, moving from an interesting Resolution of the European Parliament of 2017. Legal scholars seem to be mainly attracted by digitalisation, which implies the development of smart working and platform work governed by algorithms. The pervading impact of robotics seems to imply fewer divergences from the traditional structure of labour law in terms of institutions and legal categories. However, it could determine even more radical changes, possibly approaching scenarios where only science fiction has been before.
topic robotics
digital employment
smart working
crowdwork
algorithms
url https://labourlaw.unibo.it/article/view/8796
work_keys_str_mv AT donatagottardi fromfrankensteintoasimovpredictiveliteratureroboticsandwork
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