Nottingham Peer Production Workshop

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Below are various materials related to the first academic conference on Peer Production, held at Nottingham Trent University on November 15-16, 2007, co-organized by Andreas Wittel and Michel Bauwens.

Presentations

  1. Stefan Merten (Oekonux): Free Software: The Most Mature P2P Economy. 1) Text version of key Oekonux concepts.
  2. Adam Arvidsson: Review: The Ethical Economy
  3. Yuwei Lin: Women's collective action in the free software world
  4. Paul Hartzog and Richard Adler, Oort-Cloud: Social Publishing in a Peer to Peer World.
  5. Henrik Ingo, Do we want Direct Democracy?
  6. Dr Athina Karatzogianni, University of Hull, author of Cyberconflict and Dr George Michaelides Institute of Work Psychology, University of Sheffield: Cryptohierarchies, Soft Control and Group Polarization in Networked Communities.

Details

Yuwei Lin:

I was there, too. I gave a talk titled 'Women's collective action in the free software world' at this workshop. I argued that voluntary work in free software is not necessarily unpaid labour; people are motivated by a variety of matters to get involved in free software. However, the majority of the rewarded and visible labour is coding jobs largely done by men. In this talk, I drew on the stories about women's practices in developing and using free software, and tackled such overemphasis on the value of coding and men's work. I called for attention to invisible values of mutual helping, mutual learning, participating, and sharing experiences. I also called for acknowledgement of women's participation (and hence diverse ways of coding and hacking) in the free software world.