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The sustainability of the gig economy food delivery system (Deliveroo, UberEATS and Just-Eat): Histories and futures of rebound, lock-in and path dependency.

The sustainability of the gig economy food delivery system (Deliveroo, UberEATS and Just-Eat): Histories and futures of rebound, lock-in and path dependency.
The sustainability of the gig economy food delivery system (Deliveroo, UberEATS and Just-Eat): Histories and futures of rebound, lock-in and path dependency.
Online food delivery has transformed the last-mile of food and grocery delivery, with unnoticed yet often significant impacts upon the transport and logistics network. This new model of food delivery is not just increasing congestion in urban centers though, it is also changing the contours and qualities of those doing delivery—namely through gig economy work. This new system of food consumption and provision is rapidly gaining traction, but assessments around its current and future sustainability tend to hold separate the notions of social, environmental and economic sustainability—with few to date working to understand how these can interact, influence and be in conflict with one another. This paper seeks to work with this broader understanding of sustainability, whilst also foregrounding the perspectives of gig economy couriers who are often marginalized in such assessments of the online food delivery system. We make use of systems thinking and Campbell’s conflict model of sustainability to do this. In assessing the online food delivery in this way, we seek to not only provide a counternarrative to some of these previous assessments, but to also challenge those proposing the use of gig economy couriers as an environmentally sustainable logistics intervention in other areas of last-mile logistics to consider how this might impact the broader sustainability of their system, now and in the future.
Gig economy couriers, path dependence, rebounds, sustainability, systems thinking
1556-8318
Lord, Carolynne
2e9e1c74-f9df-42c6-8eb1-982535c7892a
Bates, Oliver
ae9477b7-7d69-4826-be0c-58c195bfbca4
Friday, Adrian
c75fc0d5-51ba-4b32-95d9-6d735c04f42c
Mcleod, Fraser
93da13ec-7f81-470f-8a01-9339e80abe98
Cherrett, Thomas
e5929951-e97c-4720-96a8-3e586f2d5f95
Martinez Sykora, Antonio
2f9989e1-7860-4163-996c-b1e6f21d5bed
Oakey, Andy
dfd6e317-1e6d-429c-a3e0-bc80e92787d1
et al.
Lord, Carolynne
2e9e1c74-f9df-42c6-8eb1-982535c7892a
Bates, Oliver
ae9477b7-7d69-4826-be0c-58c195bfbca4
Friday, Adrian
c75fc0d5-51ba-4b32-95d9-6d735c04f42c
Mcleod, Fraser
93da13ec-7f81-470f-8a01-9339e80abe98
Cherrett, Thomas
e5929951-e97c-4720-96a8-3e586f2d5f95
Martinez Sykora, Antonio
2f9989e1-7860-4163-996c-b1e6f21d5bed
Oakey, Andy
dfd6e317-1e6d-429c-a3e0-bc80e92787d1

Lord, Carolynne, Bates, Oliver, Friday, Adrian, Mcleod, Fraser, Cherrett, Thomas, Martinez Sykora, Antonio and Oakey, Andy , et al. (2022) The sustainability of the gig economy food delivery system (Deliveroo, UberEATS and Just-Eat): Histories and futures of rebound, lock-in and path dependency. International Journal of Sustainable Transportation. (doi:10.1080/15568318.2022.2066583).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Online food delivery has transformed the last-mile of food and grocery delivery, with unnoticed yet often significant impacts upon the transport and logistics network. This new model of food delivery is not just increasing congestion in urban centers though, it is also changing the contours and qualities of those doing delivery—namely through gig economy work. This new system of food consumption and provision is rapidly gaining traction, but assessments around its current and future sustainability tend to hold separate the notions of social, environmental and economic sustainability—with few to date working to understand how these can interact, influence and be in conflict with one another. This paper seeks to work with this broader understanding of sustainability, whilst also foregrounding the perspectives of gig economy couriers who are often marginalized in such assessments of the online food delivery system. We make use of systems thinking and Campbell’s conflict model of sustainability to do this. In assessing the online food delivery in this way, we seek to not only provide a counternarrative to some of these previous assessments, but to also challenge those proposing the use of gig economy couriers as an environmentally sustainable logistics intervention in other areas of last-mile logistics to consider how this might impact the broader sustainability of their system, now and in the future.

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Accepted/In Press date: 31 March 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 2 May 2022
Published date: 2 May 2022
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2022 Lancaster University. Published with license by Taylor and Francis Group, LLC.
Keywords: Gig economy couriers, path dependence, rebounds, sustainability, systems thinking

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 457303
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/457303
ISSN: 1556-8318
PURE UUID: e929b368-3366-4424-a0f7-a303bbf73722
ORCID for Fraser Mcleod: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5784-9342
ORCID for Thomas Cherrett: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0394-5459
ORCID for Antonio Martinez Sykora: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2435-3113
ORCID for Andy Oakey: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1796-5485

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Date deposited: 31 May 2022 16:42
Last modified: 10 Apr 2024 02:07

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Contributors

Author: Carolynne Lord
Author: Oliver Bates
Author: Adrian Friday
Author: Fraser Mcleod ORCID iD
Author: Thomas Cherrett ORCID iD
Author: Andy Oakey ORCID iD
Corporate Author: et al.

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