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Research Article

Decent work and tourism workers in the age of intelligent automation and digital surveillance

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Pages 2860-2877 | Received 15 May 2020, Accepted 04 May 2021, Published online: 27 May 2021
 

Abstract

Technology is shifting not only how the tourism industry is run but also the nature of work, working conditions and management control. This article examines the potential implications of technology-driven transformations on lower-paid lower-skilled tourism workers. With tourism expected to be the sector most affected by intelligent automation, greater attention needs to be given to the variegated impact on the workforce. Drawing on the concepts of surveillance capitalism, disruptive innovation and techno-solutionism, the article problematises these transformations and unpacks the rhetoric used by tourism and technology companies. Situating the discussion within UN Sustainable Development Goal 8 (SDG8), the article explores how – without proactive regulatory measures and worker-centric approaches – the expansion of intelligent automation in tourism workplaces risks exacerbating inequalities and precarisation of lower-skilled workers, exposing them to job losses and dislocation, dehumanising their role and gradually automating them out. Additionally, digital surveillance may shift power further towards employers, reducing worker agency and impacting on worker wellbeing. Overall, despite clear benefits, unfettered intelligent automation and digital surveillance risk disrupting established worker rights and protections and inadvertently moving the tourism sector away from the ideals of decent work for all.

Acknowledgement

We would like to thank the editors and anonymous reviewers whose feedback helped shape this paper. We would also like to extend thanks to Richard Voase for his insightful comments on the structure.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Correction Statement

This article has been republished with minor changes. These changes do not impact the academic content of the article.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Agnieszka Rydzik

Agnieszka Rydzik ([email protected]) is a Senior Lecturer in the Lincoln International Business School, University of Lincoln. Her research interests include tourism labour and precarisation of work; worker agency; and gendered, racialised and embodied work.

Chavan Sharma Kissoon

Chavan Sharma Kissoon ([email protected]) is a Senior Digital Education Developer in Digital Education and a PhD Researcher at the School of Education, University of Lincoln. His research is on the sociology of digital technologies, with a particular focus on how power is mediated through technological mechanisms in contemporary society.

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