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Autores principales: Pidoux, Jessica, Tighanimine, Mariame, Kypraiou, Sofia, Kgomo, Sonia, Malgwi, Kauna Ibrahim, Mathenge, Richard Mwaura, Okinyi, Mophat, Oyange, James
Formato: Preprint
Publicado: 2025
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Acceso en línea:https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.04269
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author Pidoux, Jessica
Tighanimine, Mariame
Kypraiou, Sofia
Kgomo, Sonia
Malgwi, Kauna Ibrahim
Mathenge, Richard Mwaura
Okinyi, Mophat
Oyange, James
author_facet Pidoux, Jessica
Tighanimine, Mariame
Kypraiou, Sofia
Kgomo, Sonia
Malgwi, Kauna Ibrahim
Mathenge, Richard Mwaura
Okinyi, Mophat
Oyange, James
contents Content moderation and data annotation work has shifted to the Global South, particularly Africa, where workers at business process outsourcing (BPO) companies operate under precarity to serve Global North needs. We address the invisibility of this data labour supply chain and the underdocumented working conditions of its workforce. Drawing on a participatory collaboration between academics, an NGO, and a union, we conducted desk research and deployed a questionnaire (n=81) attuned to unions' organising goals. Our findings show that data labour spans 43 out of 55 African countries, involving 17 major firms serving predominantly North-American and European clients, with workers employed on short-term contracts, under psychological stress and economic instability - conditions that obscure the competences, i.e. adaptability and resilience, that their work demands. We contribute the first comprehensive map of Africa's data labour industry and demonstrate a methodology that centers workers' collective actions in documenting their conditions, drawing on Honneth's "struggle for recognition" to capture workers' demands for professional and social acknowledgement.
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spellingShingle Mapping Data Labour Supply Chain in Africa in an Era of Digital Apartheid: a Struggle for Recognition
Pidoux, Jessica
Tighanimine, Mariame
Kypraiou, Sofia
Kgomo, Sonia
Malgwi, Kauna Ibrahim
Mathenge, Richard Mwaura
Okinyi, Mophat
Oyange, James
Computers and Society
Human-Computer Interaction
Content moderation and data annotation work has shifted to the Global South, particularly Africa, where workers at business process outsourcing (BPO) companies operate under precarity to serve Global North needs. We address the invisibility of this data labour supply chain and the underdocumented working conditions of its workforce. Drawing on a participatory collaboration between academics, an NGO, and a union, we conducted desk research and deployed a questionnaire (n=81) attuned to unions' organising goals. Our findings show that data labour spans 43 out of 55 African countries, involving 17 major firms serving predominantly North-American and European clients, with workers employed on short-term contracts, under psychological stress and economic instability - conditions that obscure the competences, i.e. adaptability and resilience, that their work demands. We contribute the first comprehensive map of Africa's data labour industry and demonstrate a methodology that centers workers' collective actions in documenting their conditions, drawing on Honneth's "struggle for recognition" to capture workers' demands for professional and social acknowledgement.
title Mapping Data Labour Supply Chain in Africa in an Era of Digital Apartheid: a Struggle for Recognition
topic Computers and Society
Human-Computer Interaction
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.04269