Olivia Butler
PhD student at Department of Human Geography
- Telephone:
- +46 18 471 73 81
- E-mail:
- olivia.butler@kultgeog.uu.se
- Visiting address:
- Ekonomikum, Kyrkogårdsgatan 10
- Postal address:
- Box 513
751 20 UPPSALA
Download contact information for Olivia Butler at Department of Human Geography
- ORCID:
- 0009-0003-6858-871X
Short presentation
I will be completing work within the project "Work Without Jobs: A Study of Gig Workers' Existence" or "Rejtad, rosad, ratad: En studie av tillvaron som gigarbetare" under the supervision of Kristina Zampoukos and Don Mitchell. The purpose of the project is to contribute to the development of strategies and policies to facilitate sustainable working lives for gig economy workers in Sweden.
Keywords
- labour geography
- gig economy
- digitisation
- platform capitalism
- spatial division of labour

Publications
Recent publications
Part of Population, Space and Place, 2024
- DOI for Antinomies of the gig economy: The annihilation of space by time or the annihilation of time by space?
- Download full text (pdf) of Antinomies of the gig economy: The annihilation of space by time or the annihilation of time by space?
Part of Journal of ethnic and migration studies, p. 3805-3821, 2024
- DOI for Who's got time for social reproduction?: Migrant service workers as embodied infrastructures of the algorhythmic city
- Download full text (pdf) of Who's got time for social reproduction?: Migrant service workers as embodied infrastructures of the algorhythmic city
All publications
Articles in journal
Part of Population, Space and Place, 2024
- DOI for Antinomies of the gig economy: The annihilation of space by time or the annihilation of time by space?
- Download full text (pdf) of Antinomies of the gig economy: The annihilation of space by time or the annihilation of time by space?
Part of Journal of ethnic and migration studies, p. 3805-3821, 2024
- DOI for Who's got time for social reproduction?: Migrant service workers as embodied infrastructures of the algorhythmic city
- Download full text (pdf) of Who's got time for social reproduction?: Migrant service workers as embodied infrastructures of the algorhythmic city