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Download fileTransnational freelancing: Ephemeral creative projects and mobility in the music recording industry
journal contribution
posted on 2016-05-31, 12:23 authored by Allan WatsonAllan Watson, Jonathan V. BeaverstockDrawing on Gernot Grabher’s work on projects and project ecologies, there has developed a significant literature concerned with project-based organisations, recognising the fluid, transient, skills-based and localised nature of such forms. Yet, despite the inherent need within projects to draw on highly skilled labour, such literature has tended to overlook the importance of freelance, mobile labour within project ecologies, instead focusing on localised labour pools. In this paper, through a unique case study of transnational freelancing in the music recording industry, we provide a critique and development of Grabher’s conceptualisation of projects. Specifically, we focus on freelance labour to reveal the ways in which transnational mobility can reproduce social processes that have assumed to be localised, and thus the ways in which project work can stimulate mobility. Emphasising the very high degrees of ephemerality and latency with social networks, we argue that the social context in which projects operates needs to be considered well beyond local geographical contexts, with mobility acting to bridge extended periods of latency and reproduce project networks. Further, we extend the notion of social proximity within projects by considering how new ecologies of physical and virtual mobility are redefining freelance labour in the music recording industry.
History
School
- Social Sciences
Department
- Geography and Environment
Published in
Environment and Planning AVolume
48Issue
7Pages
1428-1446Citation
WATSON, A. and BEAVERSTOCK, J.V., 2016. Transnational freelancing: Ephemeral creative projects and mobility in the music recording industry. Environment and Planning A, 48 (7), pp. 1428-1446.Publisher
© The Author. Published by SageVersion
- AM (Accepted Manuscript)
Publisher statement
This work is made available according to the conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) licence. Full details of this licence are available at: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/Publication date
2016-04-01Copyright date
2016Notes
This paper was accepted for publication in the journal Environment and Planning A and the definitive published version is available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0308518X16641412ISSN
0308-518XeISSN
1472-3409Publisher version
Language
- en