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Autori principali: Sum, Cella M., Konvicka, Anna, Wang, Mona, Fox, Sarah E.
Natura: Preprint
Pubblicazione: 2025
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Accesso online:https://arxiv.org/abs/2508.12579
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author Sum, Cella M.
Konvicka, Anna
Wang, Mona
Fox, Sarah E.
author_facet Sum, Cella M.
Konvicka, Anna
Wang, Mona
Fox, Sarah E.
contents The tech industry's shifting landscape and the growing precarity of its labor force have spurred unionization efforts among tech workers. These workers turn to collective action to improve their working conditions and to protest unethical practices within their workplaces. To better understand this movement, we interviewed 44 U.S.-based tech worker-organizers to examine their motivations, strategies, challenges, and future visions for labor organizing. These workers included engineers, product managers, customer support specialists, QA analysts, logistics workers, gig workers, and union staff organizers. Our findings reveal that, contrary to popular narratives of prestige and privilege within the tech industry, tech workers face fragmented and unstable work environments which contribute to their disempowerment and hinder their organizing efforts. Despite these difficulties, organizers are laying the groundwork for a more resilient tech worker movement through community building and expanding political consciousness. By situating these dynamics within broader structural and ideological forces, we identify ways for the CSCW community to build solidarity with tech workers who are materially transforming our field through their organizing efforts.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2508_12579
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle The Future of Tech Labor: How Workers are Organizing and Transforming the Computing Industry
Sum, Cella M.
Konvicka, Anna
Wang, Mona
Fox, Sarah E.
Human-Computer Interaction
The tech industry's shifting landscape and the growing precarity of its labor force have spurred unionization efforts among tech workers. These workers turn to collective action to improve their working conditions and to protest unethical practices within their workplaces. To better understand this movement, we interviewed 44 U.S.-based tech worker-organizers to examine their motivations, strategies, challenges, and future visions for labor organizing. These workers included engineers, product managers, customer support specialists, QA analysts, logistics workers, gig workers, and union staff organizers. Our findings reveal that, contrary to popular narratives of prestige and privilege within the tech industry, tech workers face fragmented and unstable work environments which contribute to their disempowerment and hinder their organizing efforts. Despite these difficulties, organizers are laying the groundwork for a more resilient tech worker movement through community building and expanding political consciousness. By situating these dynamics within broader structural and ideological forces, we identify ways for the CSCW community to build solidarity with tech workers who are materially transforming our field through their organizing efforts.
title The Future of Tech Labor: How Workers are Organizing and Transforming the Computing Industry
topic Human-Computer Interaction
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2508.12579