Actually existing platformization: Embedding platforms in urban spaces through partnerships
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| Publication date | 10-2021 |
| Journal | The South Atlantic Quarterly |
| Volume | Issue number | 120 | 4 |
| Pages (from-to) | 715-731 |
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| Abstract |
In this article we examine the partnership as a heterogeneous boundary resource that enables platforms to generate dependencies, become locally embedded, and gain power in urban settings. Pushing back against narratives of platform-driven disruption, which tend to universalize and totalize platform power, we discuss three cases of what we term “actually existing platformization”—a path-dependent and locally situated process in which platform companies engage in various forms of “boundary work” with other actors seeking to retain and/or gain power. Each case focuses on a distinct industry: food delivery, short-term housing rental, and the social/voluntary sector. In each of these domains, we show how asset-light platforms initiate and develop partnerships as a frequently nebulous boundary resource that opens up potential avenues for (1) market consolidation, (2) logistical integration, (3) social mobilization, and/or (4) institutional legitimation. Such strategic moves, we argue, have become particularly pertinent following the COVID-19 pandemic, which has hit urban areas particularly hard and is intensifying certain social dependencies and institutional shortcomings that platforms are seeking to exploit.
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| Document type | Article |
| Note | Published in special issue titled 'Platformization and its Discontents'. |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1215/00382876-9443280 |
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