Report Launch: Worker-Owned Platforms and Intersectionality in Brazil and Argentina

The Worker-Owned Intersectional Platforms (WOIP) team is pleased to announce the launch of the action-research report Worker-Owned Platforms and Intersectionality: Shared Learnings between Brazil and Argentina. Resulting from the WOIP project, this document shares insights on alternatives to dominant models of technology and labour, proposing pathways toward more just and solidarity-based digital futures grounded in concrete Latin American experiences.

The report presents the outcomes of a collaboration between six self-managed organizations from Brazil and Argentina, active in the technology and delivery sectors. Aimed at reflecting on, imagining, and collectively building principles and practices for worker-owned platforms, the research adopts intersectionality as both a starting point and a destination, weaving together gender, race, class, and territory.

Latin American Perspectives: Participating Organizations

The research generated rich collective learning by bringing together organizations from two countries—Brazil and Argentina—and two distinct sectors: technology and delivery. One of the project’s main strengths lies in the diversity of its co-researcher organizations and their institutional arrangements:

Through participatory methods, including online and in-person meetings in São Paulo and Buenos Aires, the project created a space for dialogue where all participants acted as co-researchers in a collective decision-making process.

Key Learnings: Care, Cooperation, and Technopolitical Imagination

Anchored in the rich Latin American traditions of solidarity economy and community technologies, the WOIP research highlights essential lessons for building fairer technological ecosystems:

Key Concepts for Imagining, Working, Coding Otherwise

Drawing on their practices, each organization developed fundamental concepts that challenge Silicon Valley models:

Recommendations and Next Steps

The WOIP project points to a future research and action agenda, with challenges such as deepening debates on autonomy and sovereignty, strengthening data governance, and addressing economic sustainability. The document concludes with recommendations for self-managed organizations, policymakers, and universities.

The report is available in Portuguese, Spanish, and English.

Credits

The report and the action-research project Worker-Owned Intersectional Platforms (WOIP) are the result of collective and collaborative work involving many organizations and individuals.

Authorship

The report is collectively authored and signed by:

Project Team

Design

The report design was developed by ALT Cooperativa.

Funding

The research was funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) of Canada through an Insight Development Grant, and by the Connaught New Researcher Award, University of Toronto.

Download the Report

The report is available in Portuguese, Spanish, and English.

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