Hardt and Negri manifest three transformations of labour in the modern capitalist production: (class) The current production process is more based on immaterial factors and goods such as information, knowledge, and social relationships and includes forms of affective and cognitive labour and service work. (gender) The capitalist production process tends to become feminine. This includes a greater amount of women in the wage labour market as well as the fact, that traditional “women’s work” is becoming increasingly central. (race) An increasing proportion of both legal and illegal migrants are employed in the process of production around the world. It also generates ideological conflicts within classes. Furthermore, neoliberal forces strive to transform common goods such as public industries, public welfare structure, and public transportation networks as well as natural resources into private properties. Hence, current capitalist accumulation expropriates and destroys the common. Hardt and Negri emphasize that not only labour power but the whole social life is subsumed under capital nowadays. Based on these findings, the authors list some effects: precarity, flexibility, new regime of time, mobility, poverty of time and space, control, and surveillance. Altogether, these metamorphoses characterize what Hardt and Negri call “a biopolitcal turn of the economy”