Contents1 Introduction: Meaning and trends in precarious work 1Maria Hudson and Beatrice PiccoliPART I SHIFTING LANDSCAPES OF PRECARIOUS WORK2 Temporary agency working: New dynamics, same precarities? 16Chris Forde and Gary Slater3 Precarious work in the gig economy 31Guanyu Zhang and Lixin Jiang4 A crisis within a crisis: Forms of precarity amongst self-employed liveperformers in the wake of Covid-19 50Philip Hancock and Melissa Tyler5 Labour mobility and socio-ecological precarity 68Dina Bolokan6 Precarious 'life-worlds' and unpaid labour: Expanding research onprecarious work at the interface between work and home 83Valeria Pulignano and Glenn Morgan7 Precarious pathways to foodbank use in the UK 98Maria HudsonPART II CHANGING INSTITUTIONAL AND ORGANIZATIONALCONTEXTS OF PRECARIOUS WORK8 Divisions of labour: Making markets for exploitable workers 117Nik Theodore9 Autonomy, insecurity, community: Understanding affect in freelance work 133Casper Hoedemaekers10 Precarity and workers' strategies in the (post-)pandemic crisis: The case ofPoland 150Dominika Polkowska and Adam Mrozowicki11 Precarious work in UK hospitality: The multidimensional nature ofprecarization and the role of the state during Covid-19 166Gabriella Alberti, Charles Umney and Kiril PasevinPART III NEW INSECURITIES: THE WORKER CONSEQUENCES OFPRECARIOUSNESS12 Precarious work and mental health: Evidence, theory, and future directions 185Blake A. Allan13 On the implications of precarious work for identity, careers, and society 199Eva Selenko, Peter Creed, Katharina Klug, and Michelle Hood14 Intersecting economic stressors: Do they confer increased vulnerability orgreater resilience for precarious workers? 216Tahira M. Probst, Maike E. Debus, Jasmina Tomas, Hyun Jung Lee,Andrea Bazzoli and Melissa Jenkins15 Insecure in three ways: On the possible impact of COVID-19 on job andoccupation insecurity 237Hans De Witte, Anahí Van Hootegem and Lara Roll16 Understanding job insecurity in formal and informal work 248Mindy Shoss and Mahima Saxena17 Labour market attachment and implications for precarious work: Asystematic literature review 264Sophie Cuinen, Nele De Cuyper, Anneleen Forrier and Ilke GrosemansPART IV RESPONSES TO PRECARIOUS WORK AND STRUCTURALINEQUALITIES18 Regulating or reproducing precarious work? Analysing the regulation oftemporary employment services in South Africa 282Lynford Dor and Carin Runciman19 Precaritization, financial security and social class among older workersafter job loss 299Tom Barnes and Sally Weller20 Making work pay? The intersections of the welfare system and precariouswork in the UK 314Mathew Johnson21 Precarious work and the basic income 331Ryszard J. Koziel, Joachim Hüffmeier, Hannes Zacher andCort W. RudolphPART V REFLECTIONS ON PROSPECTS FOR THE FUTURE22 The future of precarious work: Drawing out lessons from the chapters 354Maria Hudson and Beatrice Piccoli.
Handbook on Precarious Work