“…The growth of work that develops Coe and Jordhus-Lier’s (2011) concept of constrained agency (Chan, 2014; Schwiter et al, 2018b) reflects the precarity of agency itself. This precarity of agency and resistance, as traditionally understood (reflected in, for example, workers’ collective organizations), relates to, inter alia, the accelerated pace of technological change, including automation and the applications of artificial intelligence (AI) to an increasingly wide range of tasks; and to gig work, platform economies and digital intermediation (Birtchnell and Elliott, 2018; Bissell and Del Casino, 2017; Pierce et al, 2019; Richardson and Bissell, 2019). Louise Waite and Hannah Lewis (2017: 954), whose research with asylum-seekers in the UK has inspired so much geographical work on precarity, highlight the importance of contesting discourses of the new economy, such as the ‘sharing economy’, through the lens of the ‘survival-oriented labouring’ of hyper-precarious migrants.…”