When we created ENDL (the European Network on Digital Labour), back in 2017, we booked a room with 17 places. A few days ago, the last conference of the network (which in the meantime has become INDL, replacing ‘European’ with ‘International’) hosted about 200 participants. Internationalisation has not only meant numerical growth, but also inclusion of a diverse range of voices: every year, we see more participants from countries that are often under-represented on the scientific scene, from India and South Africa to Argentina and Brazil. Participants have also diversified in another sense, too: if the majority have always been academics, it is a pleasure to see more and more workers, as well as labour organisers. This year, we could for example benefit from the presence of associations of data workers from Kenya, freelancers from France, and content moderators from Spain.

A conference like this one is meant to give hope – hope of mutual understanding across countries and cultures, hope of dialogue across disciplines and fields, hope of connections between academic research and action. We worked together to ensure a welcoming environment for all, for instance by encouraging constructive comments, rather than sheer criticism, after each paper presentation. We also strived to keep costs down in order to make the conference free of charge, and with the DiPLab research programme, we could give a few small scholarships to promising presenters who might not have been able to travel otherwise.

Surely, problems remain. A couple potential participants had visa issues, while others had to cancel due to lack of funding. These problems weigh especially hard on people from emerging and lower-income countries outside Europe and North America. The future is also uncertain, as funding sources become increasingly dryer, and visa restrictions tighter. For this reason, the main INDL-9 conference next year (Geneva, ILO, 9-11 September 2026) will be accompanied by the growth of local chapters. The Middle-East and Africa area is preparing its second conference, this time online only, on 25-26 November. In the US, a one-day event will take place at Yale University on 29 April 2026. Colleagues in Chile and Argentina are launching a series of online events.

More information on the INDL-8 conference (including the full programme) is available here.
