Editing Cooperation Workshop

From WikiDotMako

Warning: You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you log in or create an account, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.

The edit can be undone. Please check the comparison below to verify that this is what you want to do, and then publish the changes below to finish undoing the edit.

Latest revision Your text
Line 1: Line 1:
:'''Email List:''' [[Cooperation Workshop/Mailing list]]
'''Time:''' Thursdays 16:00-17:30 (Boston Time)
:'''Email:''' [[Cooperation Workshop/Mailing list]]
:'''Location:''' Berkman Conference Room / 23 Everett Street / Second Floor / Cambridge


The '''Cooperation Workshop''' group is a small, user-driven forum for discussing empirical research on cooperation. Several, but not all, of the participants are fellows at the [http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/people/fellows Berkman Center].
The '''Cooperation Workshop''' group is a small, user-driven forum for discussing early-stage cooperation research. Several, but not all, of the participants are [http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/people/fellows Berkman Fellows]. Each week, one participant will distribute work for discussion and feedback from the group.


Some weeks, we have '''seminar sessions''' which are public talks with an invited guests and will involve a presentation and a seminar discussion over about 75 minutes. They will be clearly marked below and advertised on a series of email lists.
Other researchers are welcome to join but we do ask two things of any participants:


Most of our sessions are '''workshop sessions''' where the basic model is that each week, one participant will distribute work for discussion and feedback from the group.  Researchers are welcome to join these workshop sessions but we do ask two things of all the participants:
# Each week some contextual writing will be shared with the around. This might be a draft of a paper, an extended abstracted or a description of a project, a paper (perhaps by another author) that provides important background. We expect everybody who joins the group to have done read this material in advance.
 
# We ask that participants, especially those that wish to present, to become regular participants and not just come once.  
# Each week some piece of writing will be shared with the group. This might be a draft of a paper, an extended abstracted or a description of a project, or a paper by someone outside of the group (e.g., a classic work) that provides important background. We expect everybody who joins the group to have read this material in advance.
# We ask that participants, especially those that wish to present, to become regular participants and not just come once or twice.
 
If you want to get an idea of what we do, you can check out our previous sessions:
 
* [[Cooperation Workshop/Fall 2011 Sessions|Fall 2011 Sessions]]
* [[Cooperation Workshop/Spring 2012 Sessions|Spring 2012 Sessions]]
* [[Cooperation Workshop/Fall 2012 Sessions|Fall 2012 Sessions]]
* Spring 2013 sessions below
* Spring 2014: [http://etherpad.mit.edu/p/cooperation_2014 Etherpad]
 
Also, you can check out a previous version of this group:
 
* [http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/research/cooperation/seminar Cooperation Seminar](2009-2012)


== Accessing Documents ==
== Accessing Documents ==
Line 30: Line 18:
== Participants ==
== Participants ==


* Yochai Benkler
* [[user:Aaronshaw|Aaron Shaw]]
* [http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/people/mfustermorell Mayo Fuster Morell]
* Andrés Monroy-Hernández
* [http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/people/jhergueux Jérôme Hergueux]
* [[user:Benjamin Mako Hill|Benjamin Mako Hill]]
* [[user:Benjamin Mako Hill|Benjamin Mako Hill]]
* [http://brianckeegan.com Brian Keegan]
* Brian Keegan
* Justin Reich
* [[user:Claserna|Catalina Laserna]]
* [http://erhardtgraeff.com/ Erhardt Graeff]
* [[user:Dariusz|Dariusz Jemielniak]]
* [http://vivatropolis.com/judith Judith Donath]
* Dennis Y. Tenen
* Heather Whitney
* Jennifer Shkabatur
* [http://www.warsystems.hu Bodó Balázs]
* Jérôme Hergueux
* [http://bit.ly/pmetaxas Panagiotis Takis Metaxas]
* Justin Reich
* [http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/people/dmbenfield Dalida María Benfield]
* [[User:Mayo|Mayo Fuster Morell]]
* [http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/people/mbecker Matt Becker]
* P. Takis Metaxas
* [http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/people/rdevanesan Ruha Devanesan]
* Yochai Benkler
* [http://tirl.org|Charlie DeTar]
* [http://www.nikete.com Nikete]
* [http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/sj SJ]


Add yourself here if you are participating, or want to, but aren't on the list.
Add yourself here if you are participating, or want to, but aren't on the list.


== Sessions Spring 2013 ==
== Winter/Spring 2012 Schedule ==
 
=== Session: February 2, 2012 ===
 
Andres will lead a discussion about a draft paper on: “Narcotweets”: Social Media in Wartime.
 
:This week I'd like to get feedback on this 8-page paper (emailed). I submitted it to a conference called ICWSM.  A few things I'd like to discuss:
 
:a) What are the small tweaks I can do to make it a stronger
contribution for a different venue (in case it gets rejected)? I'm
thinking First Monday as a possible venue, mainly because I want to
get this out _fast_ as a descriptive introduction to the topic and
then focus on something more specific. There's lots of data to
analyze, what are the most useful bits that are missing that would
make it more compelling. What literature should I be referencing that
I am not?
 
: b) For the next paper on the topic, we'd like to explore some of the
following questions. Using this case what can we say about...
:# does social media give power to the people against bad governments?
:# does transparency and publicity help society be more democratic?
:# does greater information access help reduce fear?
 
:How can these questions be framed in the context of existing lit? What
are good ways of operationalizing them?
 
=== Session: February 9, 2012 ===
 
=== Session: February 16, 2012 ===
 
=== Session: February 23, 2012 ===
 
'''First half a session:'''
 
Readings:
 
+ Paper: Emotions and dialogue in a peer-production community: the case of Wikipedia AUTHORS: David Laniado, Carlos Castillo, Andreas Kaltenbrunner and Mayo Fuster-Morell
 
+ Feedback from reviewers from WWW2012.
 
Paper to be submitted to Wikisym 2012.
 
=== Session: March 1, 2012 ===
 
=== Session: March 8, 2012 ===
 
Mayo: Conceptualization and operationalization of governance models, scale of participation and complexity of collaboration: Lessons learned and further development.
 
=== Session: March 15, 2012 ===
 
Spring break (University Holiday)
 
=== Session: March 22, 2012 ===
 
=== Session: March 29, 2012 ===
 
=== Session: April 5, 2012 ===


For our meetings in April, we will be meeting in '''WCC 3008 in Wasserstein Hall'''. We do not yet have a room for May so I've left the time unconfirmed. If this new time slot is working out, we will ensure that the group continues to meet at the same time.
=== Session: April 12, 2012 ===


=== Tuesday April 2, 2013 10:30-11:30 ===
=== Session: April 19, 2012 ===


Feedback for Maura Marx, Rebekah Heacock and Kenny Whitebloom on the '''Digital Public Library of American''' project and ideas about how to design/build for engagement.
=== Session: April 26, 2012 ===


=== Tuesday April 9, 2013 10:30-11:30 ===
Research design: How to and does make sense to research the dimension/extension of common-based peer production on the web?. Mayo Fuster Morell
=== Tuesday April 16, 2013 10:30-11:30 ===


Aaron (from remote) and [[Mako]] on '''Laboratories of Oligarchy? How the Iron Law Extends to Peer Production'''. A draft and some questions will be circulated to the list soon.
=== Session: May 3, 2012 ===


=== Tuesday April 23, 2013 10:30-11:30 ===
=== Session: May 10, 2012 ===


Session to discuss the research on '''comparative advantages of peer production by Marco Berlinguer'''. Marco Berlinguer, italian, is researcher at the Autonomous University of Barcelona and will be visiting Cambridge in April.
== Previous Sessions ==


Marco – merging different steams in literature (CBPP, management studies, and social economy studies) - is developing a conceptual framework on the conditions of possibility and of success of CBPP in contrast to other modes of production. Assuming a broader understanding of sustainability of peer production, Marco developed cases studies analyzing the monetarian and non-monetarian sustainability of peer production, looking to how particularly the capability to access, engage and put at work non-monetary resources constitute a condition of possibility and a comparative advantage of peer production in contrast to other forms of production. He would share a short text in advance and explain us the research he has done in the area, and would be happy to discuss the research design for a new project.
* [[Cooperation Workshop/Fall 2011 Sessions]]


=== Tuesday April 30, 2013 4:15 - 6:00p.m ===
== Proposed Sessions ==
Jérôme - ''Cooperation in a Peer Production Economy: Experimental Evidence from Wikipedia''


=== Tuesday May 7, 2013 4:15 - 6:00p.m ===
* Mako: Almost Wikipedia paper on attempts at mobilization on online collaborative encyclopedia projects to discuss paper before I send it off. (Sometime in November/December)


Mayo Fuster Morell - Research project: P2Pvalue: Techno-social platform for sustainable models and value generation in commons-based peer production
* Yochai/Mako/Aaron: Barnstar paper.


Milstein East A in the Wasserstein building
* Andreea/Dariusz: Let's agree to disagree: why conflict results in better articles on Wikipedia (December/January).
4:15 - 6:00p.m


=== Tuesday May 14, 2013 (4:15 - 6:00p.m) ===
* Group transversal session (initially proposed by Mayo, but aiming to be collectively conceptualize):  
First part - "Rethinking the phenomenon/field analysis":  
i) Rethinking the (pros and contras) of the diverse concepts we use and are present in the literature to refer to the phenomenon of study (common-based peer production/open creation communities/open collaborative communities/online creation communities/peer production etc.)
ii) Rethinking the "field: Is there a "field" of research on CBPP? Which would be the stage of it? How the analyses and the research stage has evolved over time and which seems to be its potential developments?


Charlie DeTar -- update on dissertation work and methodological challenges.
Second part - "Rethinking the group":
iii) Going though the shared or/and transversal reflections that had emerged in previous sessions: Do we share a common conception of the phenomenon (even if approaching it from diverse perspectives and methodological tools)?
iv) Rethinking opportunities and possible further developments: Richness of the group and potentialities of the group? Do we (as a group or some of us) share goals for future developments? 


Location: Milstein East A, WCC.
Suggested for February 16 or 23.


=== Tuesday May 21, 2013 (Time TBD) ===
* Howard Rheingold readings on social cooperation
=== Tuesday May 28, 2013 (Time TBD) ===
[[User:Dariusz|Dariusz]] - Liquid Collaboration (using Bauman to study open collaboration)


=== Tuesday June 4, 2013 (Time TBD) ===
== Proposed papers and Proceedings to read==
[[User:Nikete| Nicolas Della Penna (Nikete)]] - Cross Pollinating Polarized Political Discourse
* [http://mfi.uchicago.edu/publications/papers/on-the-economics-and-biology-of-trust.pdf "On the economics and biology of Trust" - E. Fehr]
Please note that all contributions to WikiDotMako are considered to be released under the Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported (see WikiDotMako:Copyrights for details). If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly and redistributed at will, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource. Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!

To protect the wiki against automated edit spam, we kindly ask you to solve the following CAPTCHA:

Cancel Editing help (opens in new window)