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Uganda's Boda-Boda Drivers - the Digital Economy Hasn't Been the Route to Formal Work and Better Protection
Ride-hail companies in Kampala charge 15%-20% commissions and sell equipment that creates debt, formalizing corporate revenues rather than driver employment or protections.
Summary by allAfrica
2 Articles
2 Articles
Uganda's Boda-Boda Drivers - the Digital Economy Hasn't Been the Route to Formal Work and Better Protection
Analysis - Digital labour platforms - like fast food delivery and cab hailing services - are having a dramatic impact on people's labour rights and working conditions around the world.
·South Africa
Read Full ArticleUganda’s boda-boda drivers: the digital economy hasn’t been the route to formal work and better protection – research
Digital labour platforms – like fast food delivery and cab hailing services – are having a dramatic impact on people’s labour rights and working conditions around the world. In western countries like the UK and the US, their rise has intensified a process of labour casualisation already several decades in the making. Under the guise of “flexibility”, platforms have heralded a return to insecure, temporary forms of employment that offer few right…
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Total News Sources2
Leaning Left0Leaning Right0Center2Last UpdatedBias Distribution100% Center
Bias Distribution
- 100% of the sources are Center
100% Center
C 100%
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