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- <h1>Chester Robert Jones</h1>
+ <h1><a href="/">Chester Robert Jones</a></h1>
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- <a href="#">Overview</a>
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<details>
<summary>Personal</summary>
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- <li><a href="#">Riders</a></li>
- <li><a href="#">Cotton Town</a></li>
- <li><a href="#">Memorobilia</a></li>
+ <li><a href="/personal/riders/">Riders</a></li>
+ <li><a href="/personal/cotton-town/">Cotton Town</a></li>
+ <li><a href="/personal/memorobilia/">Memorobilia</a></li>
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</details>
</li>
<details>
<summary>Commercial</summary>
<ul>
- <li><a href="#">Le Blanc Fine Art</a></li>
- <li><a href="#">GROKE</a></li>
+ <li><a href="/commercial/le-blanc-fine-art/">Le Blanc Fine Art</a></li>
+ <li><a href="/commercial/groke/">GROKE</a></li>
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- <a href="#">About Me</a>
+ <a href="/about/">About Me</a>
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- <a href="#">CV</a>
+ <a href="/cv/">CV</a>
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-
-<h2 style="margin-bottom: 0;">Riders</h2>
-<h3 style="text-align: center; font-size: 1em; margin-top: 0;"><em><u><a href="#book">The Riders Book (PDF)</a></u></em></h3>
-
-<h3>In Their Own Words</h3>
-
-<p>
- Making your way through Manchester, or any major city in Britain, it's hard to miss the Riders zipping around on chunky electric bikes with bright, colourful cubes on their backs. No matter the time, no matter the weather, they seem to be on the job. They have a constant presence in the city, yet they somehow slip under the radar, unnoticed by us unless they're in the way of our car or delivering our food. This is what interests me; the place they occupy in our city and in society at large. Out of curiosity I delved into some research and in my own amateur attempt at some political analysis I began to see these people as a newly manufactured and characteristically modern rung below our traditional working class. Workers doubly exploited by tech-corporations, hyper-exploited if you will, as both migrant workers and gig-economy workers; especially vulnerable to predatory business practices, and suffering the detriments of zero-hour employment contracts at the same time. As I began to learn more concretely about concepts such as the 'gig-economy', the 'platform economy', and about food delivery apps' behaviours (which are discussed in the second section of this book), I became very interested in speaking to people myself to learn what life as a Rider is really like.
-</p>
-
-<div class="blockquoteImage reversed">
- <img
- srcset="/media/photos_960/cristian.jpg,
- /media/photos_1920/cristian.jpg x2,
- /media/photos_3840/cristian.jpg x4"
- src="/media/photos_3840/cristian.jpg" /><blockquote>
- <b>Christian</b><br>
- "My hope for the future is that finally people, especially the working class people can have the opportunity to understand his role in the history so, can eradicate the idea of borders and banal nationalistic feeling that divides us all around the world. In that way we can build a society free of any kind of discrimination and be able to have societies where the basic needs would not be a obstacle to have free time and develop other capabilities such as art, music, philosophy, etc. and anyone can explore their own happiness without any economical, political or cultural restrain. Then we could have a world free of wars and classes. But my hope in short term is that Palestine and its people could have the opportunity to live in peace and have sovereignty of their own land."
- </blockquote>
-</div>
-
-<p>
- Over the course of the project, I spoke to a huge array of people from a massive range of social backgrounds. I spoke to foreign students, to refugees who had fled war, to people who came to the UK with dreams of achieving qualifications and building businesses, and to people who couldn't remember why they decided to come to this tiny island in the first place. The common denominator was their kindness. Whilst many were suspicious of me, thinking I must be working for one of their companies, most were very open and happy to speak to an outsider about the reality they're facing. I was offered to share coffee, some Riders offered to show me round their home countries, and whenever I bumped into a Rider I had already spoken to I was greeted warmly.
-</p>
-
-<div class="audioNote">
- <aside>
- Cristian<br>
- 4 minutes. <a href="#">Transcript</a>
- </aside><audio controls src="/media/audio/cristian.mp3"></audio>
-</div>
-
-<h3>Daylight Robbery</h3>
-
-<p>
- Some told me that they were happy with their jobs. Most of the time these were the younger Riders, relatively new to the job, perhaps working parttime, who seemed to not be as experienced or as worn out as the older Riders. The general consensus amongst those Riders who had been working longer was that the job is "shit." On the first day of this project I spoke to a Pakistani man who had come to the UK a few years ago as a business student hoping to start a business here after graduating. He told me about the low pay and dangerous conditions, then summed it all up in one phrase: "bad life." This man had come here with a vision of the UK in his mind that turned out to be very far from the truth. Now, he told me, he feels trapped here in a situation no better than the one he left behind.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- To make minimum wage, Riders must complete about four deliveries in an hour which is almost impossible due to long distances and fierce competition. As a result, most Riders end up working around eight to twelve hours a day, some working over six days a week. Many of the Riders told me about their families back home, but when I asked if they sent money to them, nearly all of them told me that they could barely make enough to survive themselves. Nearly every person I spoke to told me how difficult it was to make ends meet, many telling me that they're forced to work another job on top of delivering just to get by. Riders told me that it was "daylight robbery", and that they felt they were a "slave for Uber." When I asked them about their hopes for the future, some told me they wanted to go back home, others told me their plans of moving upwards; studying and getting qualifications or saving up for cars so that they could leave e-bike deliveries behind. However, for some Riders the only answer that they could give was that there was no future for them. "There is no future in this job, only deliveries" one guy told me. Another Rider told me he has "no hopes for the future because there's nothing I can do but work."
-</p>
-
-<div class="blockquoteImage">
- <blockquote>
- <b>Anonymous 2</b><br>
- "Now I'm living here for like three years, I want to- I don't know. I want to see, because I'm confused. Before it was good, but now I'm confused."
- </blockquote><img
- srcset="/media/photos_960/anonymous2.jpg,
- /media/photos_1920/anonymous2.jpg x2,
- /media/photos_3840/anonymous2.jpg x4"
- src="/media/photos_3840/anonymous2.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>Pray For the Rain</h3>
-
-<p>
- In this job, the expression that "time is money" becomes a very real and constant concern. Speed becomes your survival, and so Riders are often forced to go as fast as they can. As a result, they are constantly getting into accidents and then have no choice but to continue working. One guy I spoke to had a broken wrist and told me that if he stopped working to let it heal properly, he wouldn't have enough money to live. While I was speaking to a young student from Pakistan who had only been a Rider for a couple of weeks, he said something that was meant to be a bit of a joke, but which actually reflected a dark reality of the job. He told me "normally you pray for the nice sunny weather, but us Riders, we pray for the rain to come." When the weather is bad, people are much more likely to do two things: stay at home and order food, and drive their cars. As a result, business is always best for the Riders when the roads are at their most dangerous, when the tarmac is slick with rainwater, visibility is low, and cars are everywhere.
-</p>
-
-<div class="blockquoteImage reversed">
- <img
- srcset="/media/photos_960/haseen.jpg,
- /media/photos_1920/haseen.jpg x2,
- /media/photos_3840/haseen.jpg x4"
- src="/media/photos_3840/haseen.jpg" /><blockquote>
- <b>Haseen</b><br>
- "I hope to complete my postgraduate research successfully and return to my professional path as a doctor and researcher. My dream is to contribute to the medical field through both clinical practice and academic work. I want to be in a position where I can use my skills to make a difference-not just survive on side jobs. Eventually, I hope to secure a role in healthcare or research here in the UK, where my experience and education are recognized. This phase is difficult, but I believe it's just one chapter in a much bigger story."
- </blockquote>
-</div>
-
-<p>
- On one of those busy, rainy nights I spoke to Dawit, a guy who had been working as a Rider for around three years. This conversation was the first time I'd heard about people dying on the job. This fact took me by surprise, but knowing what I now know about the reality of this industry, it seems my shock was somewhat naïve. Dawit also opened up to me about the psychological effects of working as a Rider, telling me that people on the street don't respect them, and neither do most customers or restaurant workers. "I walk into a restaurant, and I feel like shit. Because we look like shit. We're exhausted." He spoke to me about the racism that he endures while working; an issue that I'd heard about from other Riders too. Racist slurs shouted through the windows of passing cars, some Riders even telling me that they'd had things thrown at them by people in cars. One guy summed it up plainly, telling me that eighty percent of people are racist towards them. Its no wonder then that the job can take a huge mental toll, especially when Riders are forced to back down from confrontations due to the apps' built in rating systems. A bad rating can directly impact the algorithm, resulting in less work. Another Rider told me how difficult and humiliating it is to have to hold your tongue when a customer is screaming at you for being late, or if an item is missing from their order. It seems obvious that these things are out of the Riders' control, but this doesn't seem to stop spiteful customers verbally abusing the people that deliver their food.
-</p>
-
-<h3>Sam</h3>
-
-<p>
- The same night I met Dawit, I also spoke to a man called Sam. I told him he had the same name as my Dad and he smiled. Sam had been working as a Rider for six years and the first thing he said when I asked him about the job was "its shit." He told me about how the pay had gotten dramatically worse over time, especially since the pandemic and that he now has to work between nine and twelve hours a day when he used to only work six to eight. When Sam began to speak about the dangers of the job, his eyes started to shine and well up. He told me, as I'd heard from Dawit, that it was common to have accidents and crashes up to four times a day, and that many people die on the job. But for Sam this fact was incredibly personal; over the six years he'd been working as a rider he told me that three of his friends had died in car crashes. Three people dead, yet the job remained the same he told me, just as dangerous if not more so now that wages are lower, and competition is higher. As far as the platforms are concerned, those people simply logged off and will be replaced by someone else. Sam went on to explain to me that it's not just the roads that are incredibly dangerous. Forced to work such late hours in the city centre, he and his friends constantly face the risk of street crime, from thefts to stabbings. This conversation had a profound impact on me that I would carry through the rest of the project. As I spoke to Sam and saw the emotion in his eyes, the cruelty and disregard of the Riders' companies was made tangible and vivid. I had known already that working for these companies was bad, but this interaction felt like bearing witness to the barbarity myself.
-</p>
-
-<div class="slideshow">
- <img
- srcset="/media/photos_960/anonymous3.jpg,
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- src="/media/photos_3840/anonymous3.jpg">
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- srcset="/media/photos_960/ataklti.jpg,
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- <img
- srcset="/media/photos_960/anonymous1.jpg,
- /media/photos_1920/anonymous1.jpg x2,
- /media/photos_3840/anonymous1.jpg x4"
- src="/media/photos_3840/anonymous1.jpg">
- <p class="prev">
- <span><span class="arrow">◄</span> <span class="fadeOut">Prev.</span><span>
- </p><p class="next">
- <span><span class="fadeOut">Next</span> <span class="arrow">►</span><span>
- </p>
-</div>
-
-<h3>Permits, Police, and No-Go Zones</h3>
-
-<p>
- Many of the Riders I spoke to, or who saw me speaking to others and taking their photos, were suspicious that I might be working with the police or with their companies. Having explained the project to them, many didn't want to show their faces or be seen to be involved in what I was trying to do. I learnt from some Riders that this was probably because lots of people work on fake or shared work permits. The reason for this is that so many migrants that come into the UK are unable to obtain legitimate work permits from the government, forcing them to go down illegitimate routes. I spoke to one Rider who expanded on this, referring to a "mafia" from which Riders can buy fake work permits and other papers they might need. With no other options, people are forced into shady deals, paying fees of well over a few hundred pounds to get everything they need to appear as though they are working lawfully.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- False permits are not the only cause for suspicion and unease. Riders are also constantly facing trouble from the police, with bike seizures being a regular occurrence. Some electric bikes are rented out from legitimate companies. Some, however, are homemade, taped and strapped together with duct tape and bungee cord, built with batteries and motors salvaged or ordered online, some of which happen to be illegal in the UK. Lots of riders told me about the enormous setbacks that police seizures cause, with bikes costing up to a thousand pounds, if not more. Not only could that be months worth of wages gone with no reprieve, it also forces Riders to stop working for however long it takes them to get back up and running again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- After taking a photo of a Rider named Muzzamil, we shook hands, and he rode off. A few seconds later, a police car hurtled past me and shouted at him to pull over. A policeman got out of the car and immediately began inquiring about his bike. Muzzamil explained that all the parts of the bike were legal, and that he'd made it himself. The policeman realised he'd made a mistake and walked back to his car. "You scared me, man!" shouted Muzzamil to the officer, clearly having thought his livelihood might've been taken from him a few seconds ago. "That's my job!" the policeman shouted back.
-</p>
-
-<div class="blockquoteImage">
- <blockquote>
- <b>Mohit</b><br>
- "My future, my grand plan, is to quit this job. After four months I will start again in winter, because in winter work is good. Because everybody orders online, in summer everyone comes outside but in winter if the weather is right, work is very busy. In the sun rise, there is no work."
- </blockquote><img
- srcset="/media/photos_960/mohit.jpg,
- /media/photos_1920/mohit.jpg x2,
- /media/photos_3840/mohit.jpg x4"
- src="/media/photos_3840/mohit.jpg" />
-</div>
-<p>
- Of course, the police aren't the only ones taking bikes away from Riders. Another harsh reality of the job is bike thefts. A ridiculous amount of Riders told me that they'd had their bikes stolen or that they'd had run ins with bike thieves. Many told me that they had their own personal no-go areas, parts of the city that they had heard bad stories about, or where they'd been targeted themselves. Stories of stabbings, would-be thieves wielding machetes, and gangs of teenagers swarming Riders trying to pull them off their bikes. One Rider, a man called Ahmed, spoke to me about an experience he had riding through Rusholme. He told me about how a group of men had attempted to steal his bike, trying to hit him off with a baseball bat. Ahmed said that he had no choice but to literally fight his way out, saying that he couldn't believe he had managed to escape. This appears to be a reality for many Riders, forced to quite literally fight for their livelihoods, whilst also having to ignore orders from certain neighbourhoods. And those who are especially desperate have no choice but to take those orders, risking great danger.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- To me, the conditions faced by the people I spoke to over the course of this project, are a sinister manifestation of our modern, neocolonial, capitalist society. A society characterised by algorithmic exploitation, the rise of 'techno-oligarchs', and the exploitative and colonial systems of old taking on new forms. As a result, a new group of workers has arisen. A group that faces constant danger and disregard with very little reward. What seems plainly true to me now is that the Riders are both hyper-exploited and under-appreciated in ways in which most people will never learn about. Even those who do learn will most likely never truly understand what the reality is like for these people. The purpose of this project is to help bring as many people as possible, including myself, closer to understanding that reality.
-</p>
-
-<div class="audioNote reversed">
- <audio class="captionedAudio" controls>
- <source src="/media/audio/ahmed.mp3" type="audio/mpeg"></source>
- <track
- label="English"
- kind="subtitles"
- srclang="en"
- src="/media/audio/ahmed.vtt"
- default />
- </audio><aside>
- Ahmed<br>
- 4 minutes. <a href="/media/audio/ahmed.txt">Transcript</a>
- </aside>
-</div>
-
-<h3>The Concrete Reality</h3>
-
-<p>
- The situation of the Riders really is modern. Over the last twenty-five years, immigration and emigration levels around the world have reached historic highs and as a result, the number of migrant workers in the Global North has increased massively<sup><a id="sturge2024a" href="#sturge2024">[3]</a></sup>. Migrant workers are especially vulnerable to predatory business practices, the kinds of practices that are used prolifically in another major development over the last couple of decades. The emergence in question is the 'platform economy', an expression that has a variety of definitions. The term 'platform' has been applied to countless digital giants from Facebook to Spotify to Uber, the main connection being their links to the 'gig economy'. This is a domain in which workers aren't necessarily considered workers; earning money from 'gigs' (think anything from voice acting to food deliveries) rather than from wages, a situation that lends itself nicely to the cost-cutting inclinations of big corporations.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- The term 'platform economy' has been refined by some scholars in regard to food delivery platforms such as Uber Eats, Deliveroo and Just Eat, which all operate in a similar way. The systems that these companies use are standards-based, meaning they're constantly collecting and analysing performance data; data that then gets fed into algorithms. These algorithms are used to remotely coordinate workers, centralising and consolidating the companies' control through that coordination, but whilst also positioning themselves as "simply empty vessels for hosting interactions that would otherwise be taking place"<sup><a id="timko2021a" href="#timko2021">[4]</a></sup>. The reality is the opposite. These platforms do not necessarily meet existing needs, rather they are active producers of exchanges who also set the terms of their transactions and draw out extra value from their ever-growing piles of performance data.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- This level of centralised control is what we must thank for these corporations' massive successes, but it is the promise of freedom that seems to be the platform economy's biggest draw for workers. This must be a big draw, because according to some scholars' estimates, 10% of Europe's workers participate in the platform economy, a large portion of those people working in food delivery. Advocates of this new system argue that platform work offers new, equal and wider opportunities thanks to its casual hiring process i.e. nearly anyone can sign up for platform work. The usual tedious hiring process is made non-existent. On top of this, platform work provides the freedom to choose the location and duration of your labour, no bosses to tell you when and where to work. But is this freedom real or is it merely the illusion of freedom?
-</p>
-
-<h3>"Be Your Own Boss"</h3>
-
-<p>
- The idea of being "your own boss" must be appealing, but in tired catchphrase of the platform economy there is a great sense of irony. Because the Riders and other platform workers are, from a legal perspective, contractors rather than workers, they lack a few advantages that typical employees have. For instance, platform workers are not legally entitled to certain benefits such as the minimum wage, sick pay, overtime pay, paid holidays or on-the-job accident insurance. They are also much weaker when it comes to their collective bargaining power due to their independence from each other, this forces them to work in harsher conditions for reduced wages. The reduction in question is about 40% in real terms since 2018<sup><a id="masud2024a" href="#masud2024">[1]</a></sup>. Whilst Riders are able to make certain choices about their work, the reality is a life of income instability, a continuous employment relationship without continuous work. Without a guarantee of continuous work, workers must make themselves continuously available in order to make ends meet. These conditions produce a heightened level of competition between workers which of course only really benefits the platform companies. This competition doesn't just speed up delivery times, it makes the companies' zero-hour contracts seem much more attractive. In reality, these contracts are nothing more than a tool for companies to evade their employer obligations<sup><a id="umer2021a" href="#umer2021">[5]</a></sup>.
-</p>
-
-<div class="blockquoteImage reversed">
- <img
- srcset="/media/photos_960/anonymous1.jpg,
- /media/photos_1920/anonymous1.jpg x2,
- /media/photos_3840/anonymous1.jpg x4"
- src="/media/photos_3840/anonymous1.jpg" /><blockquote>
- <b>Anonymous</b><br>
- "This job has no special future. It is very difficult to win ahead"
- </blockquote>
-</div>
-
-<p>
- Overall, the alleged freedom of platform work appears to be nothing more than a mirage; a gross distortion of the notion of freedom used to draw people in. Manchester's Riders specifically are mostly migrant workers, making them more vulnerable to exploitation by platform companies. These companies are aware of this vulnerability and take advantage of it. It is their understanding that the precarious circumstances of migrants living in the UK make them the perfect candidates for an over-exploited workforce that wouldn't dream of fighting back against their employers. At the same time, the flexibility and the easy sign-up process of platform work makes becoming a Rider the obvious choice for people arriving in the country needing money. It is this drive for survival, and the precarity of citizenship, that gives the platform companies' their ideal workers. Pushed out of their home countries either by the scourge of never-ending wars or by financial uncertainty (both postcolonial effects; the disruptive legacies of Empire) migrants find themselves in the UK with a severe lack of choice, work whatever job you can get, or go home. Their status as migrant workers makes them especially vulnerable to the predatory business practices mentioned above. Without safe channels for whistleblowing or proper opportunities to air grievances, and with the looming fear of unemployment or deportation, migrant workers working food delivery jobs are forced to work several times harder than 'traditional employees', in conditions much more dangerous. Some equivalate these conditions to Modern Day Slavery (Bryson, 2024). Whilst this is a subjective term, and whilst platform companies do tend to operate within technically legal boundaries, it is no doubt that the enormous successes of these companies are hugely thanks to the miserable conditions that their Riders face.
-
-<h3>Solidarity</h3>
-<p>
- Given how bad these conditions already are, it is no wonder that many Riders have made attempts to organise and strike. On February 2nd 2024, the grassroots group Delivery Job UK held its first strike. Ahead of the strike, Delivery Job UK emailed all the companies that were to be targeted. In response, Deliveroo emailed all their Riders a letter from GMB stating that they were the "trade union for delivery drivers" and that they will "fight for the issues that matter to you." One of the organisers of the strike said that the responses from Riders went something like "Who the fuck are these guys? We've never heard of them or been approached by them." On the day of the February 2nd strike, Deliveroo emailed restaurants encouraging them to call the police if "staff or customers feel under threat" or if they "observe loitering or anti-social behaviour", a move that left Riders feeling uneasy and upset. A spokesperson for Deliveroo said that the company "aims to provide riders with the flexible work that riders tell us they value, attractive earning opportunities and protections" and then went on to mention the voluntary partnership with GMB. Similarly, UberEats said that it offers "a flexible way for couriers to earn by using the app when and where they choose" then also claimed that "the vast majority of couriers are satisfied with their experience." Just Eat attested that it takes the "concerns of all couriers on the Just Eat network extremely seriously" and that it "welcomes their feedback" also adding that they offer "regular incentives to help them maximise their earnings." Given these lacklustre responses, Delivery Job UK organised another strike to take place later that month on Valentines Day. News spread through WhatsApp groups and by word-of-mouth among Riders waiting outside restaurants, and when Valentine's Day arrived, thousands came out to defy their companies. Huge convoys of striking Riders rolled through the cold, icy streets on mopeds and electric bikes, chanting and beeping their horns. A bold and moving act of solidarity against a faceless enemy.
-</p>
-
-<div class="audioNote">
- <aside>
- Mohammad
- 4 minutes. <a href="/media/audio/mohammad.txt">Transcript</a>
- </aside><audio class="captionedAudio" controls>
- <source src="/media/audio/mohammad.mp3" type="audio/mpeg"></source>
- <track
- label="English"
- kind="subtitles"
- srclang="en"
- src="/media/audio/mohammad.vtt"
- default />
- </audio>
-</div>
-
-<p>
- With such a large strike on such a crucial day for business, along with a platform boycott by the cause's supporters, it was expected that the outcome would be more positive than that of the strike's predecessor. However, the responses to the Valetine's Day strike were unfortunately more or less the same as the responses garnered by the first one. Just as lacklustre and impersonal. Again, the companies hammered home their claims that most of their workers are happy, and again they reasserted their pride in offering flexible work. Neither strike resulted in a pay rise.<sup><a id="smythe2024a" href="#smythe2024">[2]</a></sup>
-</p>
-
-<h3>An Invisible Workforce</h3>
-<p>
- Political and economic destabilisation, climate change and war have created tens of millions of migrants in the past few years alone. Some of those people come to our country only to find themselves in a situation that is hardly, if at all, an improvement on what they left behind. They find themselves taken advantage of by the same group of people that caused the wars, the climate disasters and the widespread instability to begin with. And on top of that, they face abuse and ignorance from the rest of us. To many people, the Riders don't exist until they're stood on the doorstep. Scholars have written about how the platform economy's demand for homogenous, mind-numbingly repetitive tasks has led to the creation of an interchangeable and invisible workforce, benefitting companies but only isolating and damaging Riders further<sup><a id="umer2021b" href="#umer2021">[5]</a></sup>. The aim of this project is to counteract this effect; to bring Riders into the forefront as individuals, representing them positively and on their own terms. The following ten portraits are of people who were kind enough to help me with this project. I learnt a lot from them, and some were happy for me to record some of what they told me in this book. Hopefully these images convey something about the Riders that you might not have seen elsewhere.
-</p>
-
-<iframe id="book" src="/media/book.pdf"></iframe>
-
-<h3>References</h3>
-
-<p class="ref" id="masud2024">
- 1. <a href="#masud2024a">^</a> Dempsey, Jemma, and Faarea Masud. (2024). <em>Deliveroo and Uber Eats Riders Strike on Valentine’s Day.</em> BBC News, Retrived 12 Feb. 2024 <a href="www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-68274158">www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-68274158</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="ref" id="smythe2024">
- 2. <a href="#smythe2024a">^</a> Smythe, Polly. (2024). <em>No Love for Deliveroo”: Food Couriers in Massive Valentine’s Day Strike.</em> Novara Media, Accessed 15 Feb. 2024 <a href="novaramedia.com/2024/02/15/no-love-for-deliveroo-food-couriers-in-a-massive-valentines-day-strike/">novaramedia.com/2024/02/15/no-love-for-deliveroo-food-couriers-in-a-massive-valentines-day-strike/</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="ref" id="sturge2024">
- 3. <a href="#sturge2024a">^</a> Sturge, G. (2024). <em>Migration Statistics</em>. commonslibrary.parliament.uk. <a href="https://commonslibrary.parliament.uk/research-briefings/sn06077/">https://commonslibrary.parliament.uk/research-briefings/sn06077/</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="ref" id="timko2021">
- 4. <a href="#timko2021a">^</a> Timko, P., & van Melik, R. (2021). Being a Deliveroo Rider: Practices of Platform Labor in Nijmegen and Berlin. <em>Journal of Contemporary Ethnography, 50</em>(4), 497-523. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1177/0891241621994670">https://doi.org/10.1177/0891241621994670</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="ref" id="umer2021">
- 5. ^ <sup><a href="#umer2021a">a</a> <a href="#umer2021b">b</a></sup> Umer, Hamza. (2021). Illusory Freedom of Physical Platform Workers: Insights from Uber Eats in Japan. <em>The Economic and Labour Relations Review, vol. 32</em>(3). <a href="https://doi.org/10.1177/1035304621992466">https://doi.org/10.1177/1035304621992466</a>
-</p>
-
-<h3>Acknowledgements</h3>
-<p>
- Mum, for being my biggest supporter<br>
- Arthur Whelan, I couldn't have done it without you, my faithful backdrop boy<br>
- Fin Miller, Lewis Ream, Sully Qureshi, Ben James, and Patrick Naylor, my amazing light-holders and backdrop-boy-stand-ins<br><br>
- Carolyn Mendelsohn for her mentorship and ideas.<br>
- Charlie Clift for inspiring these images.<br>
- Caroline Edge, Chrystal Cherniwchan, & Caitlin Griffiths, for believing in the project<br>
- John Boothe, for imparting some of your endless editing wisdom onto me<br>
- Craig Tattersall, for helping me build backdrop 1.0<br>
- Dan Pickles, for helping me build backdrop 2.0<br>
- Alex & Liam, for accepting my printing challenge<br>
- The Equipment Store Team, for putting up with me
-</p>
-
</main>
- <details style="
- position: fixed;
- top: 10px;
- right: 10px;
- font-family: serif;
- border: 1px solid red;
- color: red;
- ">
- <summary>Change notes Chester</summary>
- <p>Requests changed since last meeting:</p>
- <ul>
- <li>Remove the drop arrows on the drop-down menu on the left (done, added only on hover, could remove those also)</li>
- <li>Add the text with images at the top (done)</li>
- <li>Change the riders font at the top to Proxima Nova (done)</li>
- <li>Try the slideshow with buttons instead of text at the bottom</li>
- <li>Setup the site for auth view (if youre reading this its done)</li>
- <li>Add text emailed over</li>
- <li>Fix refs</li>
- </ul>
- <p>Also added audio and implemented captions for accessibility.<p>
- <p>
- I've arranged the text v. images according to half the doc you emailed and half what we talked last time. I noted that you wanted to start with some image-quotes and then have the slideshow further down. Other than that I've tried to distribute evenly with the audio nearby the photo of the rider if there is one. There are 3 images in the slideshow at the moment. Also possibly it looks strange having the pdf there at the bottom? How would you feel about just a link to it?
- </p>
- </details>
- <div id="dim" style="pointer-events: none">
- <span style="pointer-events: none">Close</span>
- </div>
</body>
</html>
--- /dev/null
+<!DOCTYPE html>
+<html>
+ <head>
+ <title>Demo</title>
+
+ <link rel="stylesheet" href="/fonts.css">
+ <link rel="stylesheet" href="/style.css">
+ <script type="text/javascript" src="/script.js" defer></script>
+ <script type="text/javascript" src="/slideshow.js" defer></script>
+ </head>
+ <body>
+ <nav>
+ <h1><a href="/">Chester Robert Jones</a></h1>
+ <ul>
+ <li>
+ <details>
+ <summary>Personal</summary>
+ <ul>
+ <li><a href="/personal/riders/">Riders</a></li>
+ <li><a href="/personal/cotton-town/">Cotton Town</a></li>
+ <li><a href="/personal/memorobilia/">Memorobilia</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </details>
+ </li>
+ <li>
+ <details>
+ <summary>Commercial</summary>
+ <ul>
+ <li><a href="/commercial/le-blanc-fine-art/">Le Blanc Fine Art</a></li>
+ <li><a href="/commercial/groke/">GROKE</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </details>
+ </li>
+ <li>
+ <a href="/about/">About Me</a>
+ </li>
+ <li>
+ <a href="/cv/">CV</a>
+ </li>
+ <li>
+ <a href="/contacts/">Contacts</a>
+ </li>
+ </ul>
+ </nav>
+ <main>
+
+<h2 style="margin-bottom: 0;">Riders</h2>
+<h3 style="text-align: center; font-size: 1em; margin-top: 0;"><em>The workforce we fail to see.</em></h3>
+
+<h3>In Their Own Words</h3>
+
+<p>
+ Making your way through Manchester, or any major city in Britain, it's hard to miss the Riders zipping around on chunky electric bikes with bright, colourful cubes on their backs. No matter the time, no matter the weather, they seem to be on the job. They have a constant presence in the city, yet they somehow slip under the radar, unnoticed by us unless they're in the way of our car or delivering our food. This is what interests me; the place they occupy in our city and in society at large. Out of curiosity I delved into some research and in my own amateur attempt at some political analysis I began to see these people as a newly manufactured and characteristically modern rung below our traditional working class. Workers doubly exploited by tech-corporations, hyper-exploited if you will, as both migrant workers and gig-economy workers; especially vulnerable to predatory business practices, and suffering the detriments of zero-hour employment contracts at the same time. As I began to learn more concretely about concepts such as the 'gig-economy', the 'platform economy', and about food delivery apps' behaviours (which are discussed in the second section of this book), I became very interested in speaking to people myself to learn what life as a Rider is really like.
+</p>
+
+<div class="blockquoteImage reversed">
+ <img
+ srcset="/media/photos_960/cristian.jpg,
+ /media/photos_1920/cristian.jpg x2,
+ /media/photos_3840/cristian.jpg x4"
+ src="/media/photos_3840/cristian.jpg" /><blockquote>
+ <b>Cristian</b><br>
+ "My hope for the future is that finally people, especially the working class people can have the opportunity to understand his role in the history so, can eradicate the idea of borders and banal nationalistic feeling that divides us all around the world. In that way we can build a society free of any kind of discrimination and be able to have societies where the basic needs would not be a obstacle to have free time and develop other capabilities such as art, music, philosophy, etc. and anyone can explore their own happiness without any economical, political or cultural restrain. Then we could have a world free of wars and classes. But my hope in short term is that Palestine and its people could have the opportunity to live in peace and have sovereignty of their own land."
+ </blockquote>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+ Over the course of the project, I spoke to a huge array of people from a massive range of social backgrounds. I spoke to foreign students, to refugees who had fled war, to people who came to the UK with dreams of achieving qualifications and building businesses, and to people who couldn't remember why they decided to come to this tiny island in the first place. The common denominator was their kindness. Whilst many were suspicious of me, thinking I must be working for one of their companies, most were very open and happy to speak to an outsider about the reality they're facing. I was offered to share coffee, some Riders offered to show me round their home countries, and whenever I bumped into a Rider I had already spoken to I was greeted warmly.
+</p>
+
+<div class="audioNote">
+ <aside>
+ Cristian<br>
+ 4 minutes. <a href="#">Transcript</a>
+ </aside><audio controls src="/media/audio/cristian.mp3"></audio>
+</div>
+
+<h3>Daylight Robbery</h3>
+
+<p>
+ Some told me that they were happy with their jobs. Most of the time these were the younger Riders, relatively new to the job, perhaps working parttime, who seemed to not be as experienced or as worn out as the older Riders. The general consensus amongst those Riders who had been working longer was that the job is "shit." On the first day of this project I spoke to a Pakistani man who had come to the UK a few years ago as a business student hoping to start a business here after graduating. He told me about the low pay and dangerous conditions, then summed it all up in one phrase: "bad life." This man had come here with a vision of the UK in his mind that turned out to be very far from the truth. Now, he told me, he feels trapped here in a situation no better than the one he left behind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+ To make minimum wage, Riders must complete about four deliveries in an hour which is almost impossible due to long distances and fierce competition. As a result, most Riders end up working around eight to twelve hours a day, some working over six days a week. Many of the Riders told me about their families back home, but when I asked if they sent money to them, nearly all of them told me that they could barely make enough to survive themselves. Nearly every person I spoke to told me how difficult it was to make ends meet, many telling me that they're forced to work another job on top of delivering just to get by. Riders told me that it was "daylight robbery", and that they felt they were a "slave for Uber." When I asked them about their hopes for the future, some told me they wanted to go back home, others told me their plans of moving upwards; studying and getting qualifications or saving up for cars so that they could leave e-bike deliveries behind. However, for some Riders the only answer that they could give was that there was no future for them. "There is no future in this job, only deliveries" one guy told me. Another Rider told me he has "no hopes for the future because there's nothing I can do but work."
+</p>
+
+<div class="blockquoteImage">
+ <blockquote>
+ <b>Anonymous 2</b><br>
+ "Now I'm living here for like three years, I want to- I don't know. I want to see, because I'm confused. Before it was good, but now I'm confused."
+ </blockquote><img
+ srcset="/media/photos_960/anonymous2.jpg,
+ /media/photos_1920/anonymous2.jpg x2,
+ /media/photos_3840/anonymous2.jpg x4"
+ src="/media/photos_3840/anonymous2.jpg" />
+</div>
+
+<h3>Pray For the Rain</h3>
+
+<p>
+ In this job, the expression that "time is money" becomes a very real and constant concern. Speed becomes your survival, and so Riders are often forced to go as fast as they can. As a result, they are constantly getting into accidents and then have no choice but to continue working. One guy I spoke to had a broken wrist and told me that if he stopped working to let it heal properly, he wouldn't have enough money to live. While I was speaking to a young student from Pakistan who had only been a Rider for a couple of weeks, he said something that was meant to be a bit of a joke, but which actually reflected a dark reality of the job. He told me "normally you pray for the nice sunny weather, but us Riders, we pray for the rain to come." When the weather is bad, people are much more likely to do two things: stay at home and order food, and drive their cars. As a result, business is always best for the Riders when the roads are at their most dangerous, when the tarmac is slick with rainwater, visibility is low, and cars are everywhere.
+</p>
+
+<div class="blockquoteImage reversed">
+ <img
+ srcset="/media/photos_960/mohit.jpg,
+ /media/photos_1920/mohit.jpg x2,
+ /media/photos_3840/mohit.jpg x4"
+ src="/media/photos_3840/mohit.jpg" /><blockquote>
+ <b>Mohit</b><br>
+ "My future, my grand plan, is to quit this job. After four months I will start again in winter, because in winter work is good. Because everybody orders online, in summer everyone comes outside but in winter if the weather is right, work is very busy. In the sun rise, there is no work."
+ </blockquote>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+ On one of those busy, rainy nights I spoke to Dawit, a guy who had been working as a Rider for around three years. This conversation was the first time I'd heard about people dying on the job. This fact took me by surprise, but knowing what I now know about the reality of this industry, it seems my shock was somewhat naïve. Dawit also opened up to me about the psychological effects of working as a Rider, telling me that people on the street don't respect them, and neither do most customers or restaurant workers. "I walk into a restaurant, and I feel like shit. Because we look like shit. We're exhausted." He spoke to me about the racism that he endures while working; an issue that I'd heard about from other Riders too. Racist slurs shouted through the windows of passing cars, some Riders even telling me that they'd had things thrown at them by people in cars. One guy summed it up plainly, telling me that eighty percent of people are racist towards them. Its no wonder then that the job can take a huge mental toll, especially when Riders are forced to back down from confrontations due to the apps' built in rating systems. A bad rating can directly impact the algorithm, resulting in less work. Another Rider told me how difficult and humiliating it is to have to hold your tongue when a customer is screaming at you for being late, or if an item is missing from their order. It seems obvious that these things are out of the Riders' control, but this doesn't seem to stop spiteful customers verbally abusing the people that deliver their food.
+</p>
+
+<h3>Sam</h3>
+
+<p>
+ The same night I met Dawit, I also spoke to a man called Sam. I told him he had the same name as my Dad and he smiled. Sam had been working as a Rider for six years and the first thing he said when I asked him about the job was "its shit." He told me about how the pay had gotten dramatically worse over time, especially since the pandemic and that he now has to work between nine and twelve hours a day when he used to only work six to eight. When Sam began to speak about the dangers of the job, his eyes started to shine and well up. He told me, as I'd heard from Dawit, that it was common to have accidents and crashes up to four times a day, and that many people die on the job. But for Sam this fact was incredibly personal; over the six years he'd been working as a rider he told me that three of his friends had died in car crashes. Three people dead, yet the job remained the same he told me, just as dangerous if not more so now that wages are lower, and competition is higher. As far as the platforms are concerned, those people simply logged off and will be replaced by someone else. Sam went on to explain to me that it's not just the roads that are incredibly dangerous. Forced to work such late hours in the city centre, he and his friends constantly face the risk of street crime, from thefts to stabbings. This conversation had a profound impact on me that I would carry through the rest of the project. As I spoke to Sam and saw the emotion in his eyes, the cruelty and disregard of the Riders' companies was made tangible and vivid. I had known already that working for these companies was bad, but this interaction felt like bearing witness to the barbarity myself.
+</p>
+
+<h3>Permits, Police, and No-Go Zones</h3>
+
+<p>
+ Many of the Riders I spoke to, or who saw me speaking to others and taking their photos, were suspicious that I might be working with the police or with their companies. Having explained the project to them, many didn't want to show their faces or be seen to be involved in what I was trying to do. I learnt from some Riders that this was probably because lots of people work on fake or shared work permits. The reason for this is that so many migrants that come into the UK are unable to obtain legitimate work permits from the government, forcing them to go down illegitimate routes. I spoke to one Rider who expanded on this, referring to a "mafia" from which Riders can buy fake work permits and other papers they might need. With no other options, people are forced into shady deals, paying fees of well over a few hundred pounds to get everything they need to appear as though they are working lawfully.
+</p>
+
+<div class="slideshow">
+ <img
+ srcset="/media/photos_960/anonymous3.jpg,
+ /media/photos_1920/anonymous3.jpg x2,
+ /media/photos_3840/anonymous3.jpg x4"
+ src="/media/photos_3840/anonymous3.jpg">
+ <img
+ srcset="/media/photos_960/ataklti.jpg,
+ /media/photos_1920/ataklti.jpg x2,
+ /media/photos_3840/ataklti.jpg x4"
+ src="/media/photos_3840/ataklti.jpg">
+ <img
+ srcset="/media/photos_960/anonymous1.jpg,
+ /media/photos_1920/anonymous1.jpg x2,
+ /media/photos_3840/anonymous1.jpg x4"
+ src="/media/photos_3840/anonymous1.jpg">
+ <p class="prev">
+ <span><span class="arrow">◄</span> <span class="fadeOut">Prev.</span><span>
+ </p><p class="next">
+ <span><span class="fadeOut">Next</span> <span class="arrow">►</span><span>
+ </p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+ False permits are not the only cause for suspicion and unease. Riders are also constantly facing trouble from the police, with bike seizures being a regular occurrence. Some electric bikes are rented out from legitimate companies. Some, however, are homemade, taped and strapped together with duct tape and bungee cord, built with batteries and motors salvaged or ordered online, some of which happen to be illegal in the UK. Lots of riders told me about the enormous setbacks that police seizures cause, with bikes costing up to a thousand pounds, if not more. Not only could that be months worth of wages gone with no reprieve, it also forces Riders to stop working for however long it takes them to get back up and running again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+ After taking a photo of a Rider named Muzzamil, we shook hands, and he rode off. A few seconds later, a police car hurtled past me and shouted at him to pull over. A policeman got out of the car and immediately began inquiring about his bike. Muzzamil explained that all the parts of the bike were legal, and that he'd made it himself. The policeman realised he'd made a mistake and walked back to his car. "You scared me, man!" shouted Muzzamil to the officer, clearly having thought his livelihood might've been taken from him a few seconds ago. "That's my job!" the policeman shouted back.
+</p>
+
+<div class="blockquoteImage">
+ <blockquote>
+ <b>Haseen</b><br>
+ "I hope to complete my postgraduate research successfully and return to my professional path as a doctor and researcher. My dream is to contribute to the medical field through both clinical practice and academic work. I want to be in a position where I can use my skills to make a difference-not just survive on side jobs. Eventually, I hope to secure a role in healthcare or research here in the UK, where my experience and education are recognized. This phase is difficult, but I believe it's just one chapter in a much bigger story."
+ </blockquote><img
+ srcset="/media/photos_960/haseen.jpg,
+ /media/photos_1920/haseen.jpg x2,
+ /media/photos_3840/haseen.jpg x4"
+ src="/media/photos_3840/haseen.jpg" />
+</div>
+
+<p>
+ Of course, the police aren't the only ones taking bikes away from Riders. Another harsh reality of the job is bike thefts. A ridiculous amount of Riders told me that they'd had their bikes stolen or that they'd had run ins with bike thieves. Many told me that they had their own personal no-go areas, parts of the city that they had heard bad stories about, or where they'd been targeted themselves. Stories of stabbings, would-be thieves wielding machetes, and gangs of teenagers swarming Riders trying to pull them off their bikes. One Rider, a man called Ahmed, spoke to me about an experience he had riding through Rusholme. He told me about how a group of men had attempted to steal his bike, trying to hit him off with a baseball bat. Ahmed said that he had no choice but to literally fight his way out, saying that he couldn't believe he had managed to escape. This appears to be a reality for many Riders, forced to quite literally fight for their livelihoods, whilst also having to ignore orders from certain neighbourhoods. And those who are especially desperate have no choice but to take those orders, risking great danger.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+ To me, the conditions faced by the people I spoke to over the course of this project, are a sinister manifestation of our modern, neocolonial, capitalist society. A society characterised by algorithmic exploitation, the rise of 'techno-oligarchs', and the exploitative and colonial systems of old taking on new forms. As a result, a new group of workers has arisen. A group that faces constant danger and disregard with very little reward. What seems plainly true to me now is that the Riders are both hyper-exploited and under-appreciated in ways in which most people will never learn about. Even those who do learn will most likely never truly understand what the reality is like for these people. The purpose of this project is to help bring as many people as possible, including myself, closer to understanding that reality.
+</p>
+
+<div class="audioNote reversed">
+ <audio class="captionedAudio" controls>
+ <source src="/media/audio/ahmed.mp3" type="audio/mpeg"></source>
+ <track
+ label="English"
+ kind="subtitles"
+ srclang="en"
+ src="/media/audio/ahmed.vtt"
+ default />
+ </audio><aside>
+ Ahmed<br>
+ 4 minutes. <a href="/media/audio/ahmed.txt">Transcript</a>
+ </aside>
+</div>
+
+<h3>The Concrete Reality</h3>
+
+<p>
+ The situation of the Riders really is modern. Over the last twenty-five years, immigration and emigration levels around the world have reached historic highs and as a result, the number of migrant workers in the Global North has increased massively<sup><a id="sturge2024a" href="#sturge2024">[3]</a></sup>. Migrant workers are especially vulnerable to predatory business practices, the kinds of practices that are used prolifically in another major development over the last couple of decades. The emergence in question is the 'platform economy', an expression that has a variety of definitions. The term 'platform' has been applied to countless digital giants from Facebook to Spotify to Uber, the main connection being their links to the 'gig economy'. This is a domain in which workers aren't necessarily considered workers; earning money from 'gigs' (think anything from voice acting to food deliveries) rather than from wages, a situation that lends itself nicely to the cost-cutting inclinations of big corporations.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+ The term 'platform economy' has been refined by some scholars in regard to food delivery platforms such as Uber Eats, Deliveroo and Just Eat, which all operate in a similar way. The systems that these companies use are standards-based, meaning they're constantly collecting and analysing performance data; data that then gets fed into algorithms. These algorithms are used to remotely coordinate workers, centralising and consolidating the companies' control through that coordination, but whilst also positioning themselves as "simply empty vessels for hosting interactions that would otherwise be taking place"<sup><a id="timko2021a" href="#timko2021">[4]</a></sup>. The reality is the opposite. These platforms do not necessarily meet existing needs, rather they are active producers of exchanges who also set the terms of their transactions and draw out extra value from their ever-growing piles of performance data.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+ This level of centralised control is what we must thank for these corporations' massive successes, but it is the promise of freedom that seems to be the platform economy's biggest draw for workers. This must be a big draw, because according to some scholars' estimates, 10% of Europe's workers participate in the platform economy, a large portion of those people working in food delivery. Advocates of this new system argue that platform work offers new, equal and wider opportunities thanks to its casual hiring process i.e. nearly anyone can sign up for platform work. The usual tedious hiring process is made non-existent. On top of this, platform work provides the freedom to choose the location and duration of your labour, no bosses to tell you when and where to work. But is this freedom real or is it merely the illusion of freedom?
+</p>
+
+<h3>"Be Your Own Boss"</h3>
+
+<p>
+ The idea of being "your own boss" must be appealing, but in tired catchphrase of the platform economy there is a great sense of irony. Because the Riders and other platform workers are, from a legal perspective, contractors rather than workers, they lack a few advantages that typical employees have. For instance, platform workers are not legally entitled to certain benefits such as the minimum wage, sick pay, overtime pay, paid holidays or on-the-job accident insurance. They are also much weaker when it comes to their collective bargaining power due to their independence from each other, this forces them to work in harsher conditions for reduced wages. The reduction in question is about 40% in real terms since 2018<sup><a id="masud2024a" href="#masud2024">[1]</a></sup>. Whilst Riders are able to make certain choices about their work, the reality is a life of income instability, a continuous employment relationship without continuous work. Without a guarantee of continuous work, workers must make themselves continuously available in order to make ends meet. These conditions produce a heightened level of competition between workers which of course only really benefits the platform companies. This competition doesn't just speed up delivery times, it makes the companies' zero-hour contracts seem much more attractive. In reality, these contracts are nothing more than a tool for companies to evade their employer obligations<sup><a id="umer2021a" href="#umer2021">[5]</a></sup>.
+</p>
+
+<div class="blockquoteImage reversed">
+ <img
+ srcset="/media/photos_960/anonymous1.jpg,
+ /media/photos_1920/anonymous1.jpg x2,
+ /media/photos_3840/anonymous1.jpg x4"
+ src="/media/photos_3840/anonymous1.jpg" /><blockquote>
+ <b>Anonymous</b><br>
+ "This job has no special future. It is very difficult to win ahead"
+ </blockquote>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+ Overall, the alleged freedom of platform work appears to be nothing more than a mirage; a gross distortion of the notion of freedom used to draw people in. Manchester's Riders specifically are mostly migrant workers, making them more vulnerable to exploitation by platform companies. These companies are aware of this vulnerability and take advantage of it. It is their understanding that the precarious circumstances of migrants living in the UK make them the perfect candidates for an over-exploited workforce that wouldn't dream of fighting back against their employers. At the same time, the flexibility and the easy sign-up process of platform work makes becoming a Rider the obvious choice for people arriving in the country needing money. It is this drive for survival, and the precarity of citizenship, that gives the platform companies' their ideal workers. Pushed out of their home countries either by the scourge of never-ending wars or by financial uncertainty (both postcolonial effects; the disruptive legacies of Empire) migrants find themselves in the UK with a severe lack of choice, work whatever job you can get, or go home. Their status as migrant workers makes them especially vulnerable to the predatory business practices mentioned above. Without safe channels for whistleblowing or proper opportunities to air grievances, and with the looming fear of unemployment or deportation, migrant workers working food delivery jobs are forced to work several times harder than 'traditional employees', in conditions much more dangerous. Some equivalate these conditions to Modern Day Slavery (Bryson, 2024). Whilst this is a subjective term, and whilst platform companies do tend to operate within technically legal boundaries, it is no doubt that the enormous successes of these companies are hugely thanks to the miserable conditions that their Riders face.
+
+<h3>Solidarity</h3>
+<p>
+ Given how bad these conditions already are, it is no wonder that many Riders have made attempts to organise and strike. On February 2nd 2024, the grassroots group Delivery Job UK held its first strike. Ahead of the strike, Delivery Job UK emailed all the companies that were to be targeted. In response, Deliveroo emailed all their Riders a letter from GMB stating that they were the "trade union for delivery drivers" and that they will "fight for the issues that matter to you." One of the organisers of the strike said that the responses from Riders went something like "Who the fuck are these guys? We've never heard of them or been approached by them." On the day of the February 2nd strike, Deliveroo emailed restaurants encouraging them to call the police if "staff or customers feel under threat" or if they "observe loitering or anti-social behaviour", a move that left Riders feeling uneasy and upset. A spokesperson for Deliveroo said that the company "aims to provide riders with the flexible work that riders tell us they value, attractive earning opportunities and protections" and then went on to mention the voluntary partnership with GMB. Similarly, UberEats said that it offers "a flexible way for couriers to earn by using the app when and where they choose" then also claimed that "the vast majority of couriers are satisfied with their experience." Just Eat attested that it takes the "concerns of all couriers on the Just Eat network extremely seriously" and that it "welcomes their feedback" also adding that they offer "regular incentives to help them maximise their earnings." Given these lacklustre responses, Delivery Job UK organised another strike to take place later that month on Valentines Day. News spread through WhatsApp groups and by word-of-mouth among Riders waiting outside restaurants, and when Valentine's Day arrived, thousands came out to defy their companies. Huge convoys of striking Riders rolled through the cold, icy streets on mopeds and electric bikes, chanting and beeping their horns. A bold and moving act of solidarity against a faceless enemy.
+</p>
+
+<div class="audioNote">
+ <aside>
+ Mohammad
+ 4 minutes. <a href="/media/audio/mohammad.txt">Transcript</a>
+ </aside><audio class="captionedAudio" controls>
+ <source src="/media/audio/mohammad.mp3" type="audio/mpeg"></source>
+ <track
+ label="English"
+ kind="subtitles"
+ srclang="en"
+ src="/media/audio/mohammad.vtt"
+ default />
+ </audio>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+ With such a large strike on such a crucial day for business, along with a platform boycott by the cause's supporters, it was expected that the outcome would be more positive than that of the strike's predecessor. However, the responses to the Valetine's Day strike were unfortunately more or less the same as the responses garnered by the first one. Just as lacklustre and impersonal. Again, the companies hammered home their claims that most of their workers are happy, and again they reasserted their pride in offering flexible work. Neither strike resulted in a pay rise.<sup><a id="smythe2024a" href="#smythe2024">[2]</a></sup>
+</p>
+
+<h3>An Invisible Workforce</h3>
+<p>
+ Political and economic destabilisation, climate change and war have created tens of millions of migrants in the past few years alone. Some of those people come to our country only to find themselves in a situation that is hardly, if at all, an improvement on what they left behind. They find themselves taken advantage of by the same group of people that caused the wars, the climate disasters and the widespread instability to begin with. And on top of that, they face abuse and ignorance from the rest of us. To many people, the Riders don't exist until they're stood on the doorstep. Scholars have written about how the platform economy's demand for homogenous, mind-numbingly repetitive tasks has led to the creation of an interchangeable and invisible workforce, benefitting companies but only isolating and damaging Riders further<sup><a id="umer2021b" href="#umer2021">[5]</a></sup>. The aim of this project is to counteract this effect; to bring Riders into the forefront as individuals, representing them positively and on their own terms. The following ten portraits are of people who were kind enough to help me with this project. I learnt a lot from them, and some were happy for me to record some of what they told me in this book. Hopefully these images convey something about the Riders that you might not have seen elsewhere.
+</p>
+
+<iframe id="book" src="/media/book.pdf"></iframe>
+
+<h3>References</h3>
+
+<p class="ref" id="masud2024">
+ 1. <a href="#masud2024a">^</a> Dempsey, Jemma, and Faarea Masud. (2024). <em>Deliveroo and Uber Eats Riders Strike on Valentine’s Day.</em> BBC News, Retrived 12 Feb. 2024 <a href="www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-68274158">www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-68274158</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="ref" id="smythe2024">
+ 2. <a href="#smythe2024a">^</a> Smythe, Polly. (2024). <em>No Love for Deliveroo”: Food Couriers in Massive Valentine’s Day Strike.</em> Novara Media, Accessed 15 Feb. 2024 <a href="novaramedia.com/2024/02/15/no-love-for-deliveroo-food-couriers-in-a-massive-valentines-day-strike/">novaramedia.com/2024/02/15/no-love-for-deliveroo-food-couriers-in-a-massive-valentines-day-strike/</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="ref" id="sturge2024">
+ 3. <a href="#sturge2024a">^</a> Sturge, G. (2024). <em>Migration Statistics</em>. commonslibrary.parliament.uk. <a href="https://commonslibrary.parliament.uk/research-briefings/sn06077/">https://commonslibrary.parliament.uk/research-briefings/sn06077/</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="ref" id="timko2021">
+ 4. <a href="#timko2021a">^</a> Timko, P., & van Melik, R. (2021). Being a Deliveroo Rider: Practices of Platform Labor in Nijmegen and Berlin. <em>Journal of Contemporary Ethnography, 50</em>(4), 497-523. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1177/0891241621994670">https://doi.org/10.1177/0891241621994670</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="ref" id="umer2021">
+ 5. ^ <sup><a href="#umer2021a">a</a> <a href="#umer2021b">b</a></sup> Umer, Hamza. (2021). Illusory Freedom of Physical Platform Workers: Insights from Uber Eats in Japan. <em>The Economic and Labour Relations Review, vol. 32</em>(3). <a href="https://doi.org/10.1177/1035304621992466">https://doi.org/10.1177/1035304621992466</a>
+</p>
+
+<h3>Acknowledgements</h3>
+<p style="line-height: 2;">
+ Mum, for being my biggest supporter<br>
+ Arthur Whelan, I couldn't have done it without you, my faithful backdrop boy<br>
+ Fin Miller, Lewis Ream, Sully Qureshi, Ben James, and Patrick Naylor, my amazing light-holders and backdrop-boy-stand-ins<br><br>
+ Carolyn Mendelsohn for her mentorship and ideas.<br>
+ Charlie Clift for inspiring these images.<br>
+ Caroline Edge, Chrystal Cherniwchan, & Caitlin Griffiths, for believing in the project<br>
+ John Boothe, for imparting some of your endless editing wisdom onto me<br>
+ Craig Tattersall, for helping me build backdrop 1.0<br>
+ Dan Pickles, for helping me build backdrop 2.0<br>
+ Alex & Liam, for accepting my printing challenge<br>
+ The Equipment Store Team, for putting up with me
+</p>
+
+ </main>
+ </body>
+</html>