Handbook of Peer Production

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* Book: The Handbook of Peer Production. Edited by Mathieu O’Neil, Christian Pentzold, and Sophie Toupin. Wiley, September 2019

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Wiley Handbooks in Communication and Media Series

Description

"The Handbook of Peer Production offers in-depth analysis of these emerging hybrid forms, as well as a uniquely comprehensive mapping of the origins and manifestations of peer production, whose principles and forms of cooperation have made inroads in multiple areas of production and sociality. Widening its scope, the Handbook of Peer Production also addresses the conditions which allow peer production to flourish or wither, as well as its consequences for the social order.

The volume gathers contributions from a diverse group of recognized experts and concludes with a panel with the founders of the field of peer production studies, who discuss its conceptual expansion, as well as a reflective piece on the future development of peer production."

Contents

(draft stage, August 2019)

Introduction and Overview (Mathieu O’Neil, Sophie Toupin, & Christian Pentzold)

Section 1 – Concepts (Explaining Peer Production)

  • Chapter 1 – Grammar of Peer Production (Vasilis Kostakis & Michael Bauwens)
  • Chapter 2 – Institutions of Peer Production: Social Norms and Rules (Christian Pentzold)
  • Chapter 3 – Political Economy of Peer Production (Benjamin Birkinbine)
  • Chapter 4 – Cultures of Peer Production (Michael Stevenson)
  • Chapter 5 (reprint) – Commons-Based Peer Production and Virtue (Helen Nissenbaum &

Yochai Benkler)


Section 2 – Cases (Realizing Peer Production)

  • Chapter 6 – Free & Open Source Software (Stéphane Couture)
  • Chapter 7 – Wikipedia and Wikis (Jutta Haider & Olof Sundin)
  • Chapter 8 – Hacker Cartography: Participatory Mapmaking and Technological Power

(Adam Fish)

  • Chapter 9 – Peer Learning (Panayotis Antoniadis, Alekos Pantazis, & Grif Peterson)
  • Chapter 10 – Shared Machine Shops (Peter Maxigas)
  • Chapter 11 – Biohacking (Morgan Meyer)
  • Chapter 12 – Makers (Yana Boeva & Peter Troxler)
  • Chapter 13 – Blockchain (Pablo Velasco Gonzáles & Nate Tkacz)
  • Chapter 14 – Wireless Community Networks (Gwen Shaffer)


Section 3 – Conditions (Enabling Peer Production)

  • Chapter 15 – Prophets and Advocates (George Dafermos)
  • Chapter 16 – Designing Technologies for Peer Production (Stefania Milan)
  • Chapter 17 – Openness and Licensing (Mélanie Dulong de Rosnay)
  • Chapter 18 – User Motivations in Peer Production (Sebastian Spaeth & Sven Niederhöfer)
  • Chapter 19 – Governing for Growth in Scope: Cultivating a Dynamic Understanding of

How Peer Production Collectives Evolve (Rebecca Karp, Amisha Miller, & Siobhan O’Mahony)


Section 4 – Collisions/Others (Peer Production and the World)

  • Chapter 20 – Social Change and Peer Production (Mathieu O’Neil & Sébastien Broca)
  • Chapter 21 – Gaps in Peer Design (Francesca Musiani)
  • Chapter 22 – Feminist Peer Production (Sophie Toupin)
  • Chapter 23 – Postcolonial Peer Production (Maitrayee Deka)
  • Chapter 24 – Peer Production and the Promotion of Virtue and Efficiency in Network

Culture (Margie Borschke)

  • Chapter 25 – Peer Production and State Theory: Envisioning a Cooperative Partner State

(Alex Pazaitis & Wolfgang Drechsler)


Section 5 – Practice/Conversion (Advancing Peer Production)

  • Chapter 26 – Making a Case for Peer Production: Interviews with Ory Okolloh, Mariam

Mecky, Abraham Taherivand, Peter Bloom, & Stefano Zacchiroli

  • Chapter 27 – Peer Production Studies? Be Your Own Peer! (Mathieu O’Neil, Sophie

Toupin, & Christian Pentzold)