Socio-Economic Review

Papers
(The H4-Index of Socio-Economic Review is 16. The table below lists those papers that are above that threshold based on CrossRef citation counts [max. 250 papers]. The publications cover those that have been published in the past four years, i.e., from 2020-10-01 to 2024-10-01.)
ArticleCitations
The platform economy matures: measuring pervasiveness and exploring power65
Between mutuality, autonomy and domination: rethinking digital platforms as contested relational structures59
Antagonism beyond employment: how the ‘subordinated agency’ of labour platforms generates conflict in the remote gig economy56
Odds stacked against workers: datafied gamification on Chinese and American food delivery platforms38
The decline in the wage share: falling bargaining power of labour or technological progress? Industry-level evidence from the OECD28
Platform capitalism: a socio-economic analysis24
Pocketbook policing: How race shapes municipal reliance on punitive fines and fees in the Chicago suburbs22
How housing affects the association between low income and living conditions-deprivation across Europe22
Credit policy and the ‘debt shift’ in advanced economies19
The economic consequences of major tax cuts for the rich19
How Orbán won? Neoliberal disenchantment and the grand strategy of financial nationalism to reconstruct capitalism and regain autonomy18
Flexibility unbound: understanding the heterogeneity of preferences among food delivery platform workers18
Crowdfunding artists: beyond match-making on platforms17
Unfair inequality and the demand for redistribution: why not all inequality is equal16
Steering the transition from informal to formal service provision: labor platforms in emerging-market countries16
Social investment as a conceptual framework for analysing well-being returns and reforms in 21st century welfare states16
Preferred policy responses to technological change: Survey evidence from OECD countries16
Framing disruption: how a regulatory capture frame legitimized the deregulation of Boston’s ride-for-hire industry16
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