[CITASA] Inaugural issue of the Journal of Peer Production

MO
Mathieu ONeil
Fri, Jul 20, 2012 3:34 PM

[Apologies for multiple posts]

“Productive Negation”: the inaugural issue of the Journal of Peer
Production is now published

http://peerproduction.net/issues/issue-1/

The Journal of Peer Production scrutinises the contradictions of peer
(collaborative) production. It is thus situated in between grassroots
initiatives and discussions driven by practitioners and activists and the
debates taking place in academia. The inaugural issue's theme, “Productive
negation”, aims to interrogate the role of peer production as a “work of
the negative”, that is to say as a critical force. As the traditional left
is struggling to come up with an adequate response to the mounting crisis
of the capitalist system, contributors propose a range of interpretations
about the relationship between the profit-oriented capitalist mode of
production and the commons-based and oriented mode of peer production. The
Journal of Peer Production also strives to make a small contribution to the
reforming of scientific publishing. Taking a cue from Wikipedia, the
journal publishes original article submissions, reviewers' reports, and
signals indicating how reviewers perceive the revised article. Our ambition
is to make the process of peer reviewing papers more transparent and more
effective.

The inaugural issue is coordinated by Mathieu O'Neil. It includes three
research papers, four invited comments and three debate papers:

George Dafermos, Authority in Peer Production: The Emergence of Governance
in the FreeBSD Project

Stefano De Paoli, Vincenzo D’Andrea and Maurizio Teli, Why Free Software Is
Not the Antonym of Commercial Software: Two Case Studies from Corporate and
Volunteer Based Projects

Francesca Musiani, Caring About the Plumbing: On the Importance of
Architectures in Social Studies of (Peer-to-Peer) Technology

Michel Bauwens, From the Theory of Peer Production to the Production of
Peer Production Theory

Jakob Rigi, Peer to Peer Production as the Alternative to Capitalism: A New
Communist Horizon

Christian Siefkes, Beyond Digital Plenty: Building Blocks for Physical Peer
Production

Jean Zin, Changing the System of Production

Stefan Meretz, Peer Production and Societal Transformation: Ten Patterns
Developed by the Oekonux Project

Maurizio Teli, Peer Production and Societal Transformation: A
Practice-Based Perspective

Toni Prug, A Note on Evaluation Processes for Social Phenomena with
Ambitious Claims

[Apologies for multiple posts] “Productive Negation”: the inaugural issue of the Journal of Peer Production is now published http://peerproduction.net/issues/issue-1/ The Journal of Peer Production scrutinises the contradictions of peer (collaborative) production. It is thus situated in between grassroots initiatives and discussions driven by practitioners and activists and the debates taking place in academia. The inaugural issue's theme, “Productive negation”, aims to interrogate the role of peer production as a “work of the negative”, that is to say as a critical force. As the traditional left is struggling to come up with an adequate response to the mounting crisis of the capitalist system, contributors propose a range of interpretations about the relationship between the profit-oriented capitalist mode of production and the commons-based and oriented mode of peer production. The Journal of Peer Production also strives to make a small contribution to the reforming of scientific publishing. Taking a cue from Wikipedia, the journal publishes original article submissions, reviewers' reports, and signals indicating how reviewers perceive the revised article. Our ambition is to make the process of peer reviewing papers more transparent and more effective. The inaugural issue is coordinated by Mathieu O'Neil. It includes three research papers, four invited comments and three debate papers: George Dafermos, Authority in Peer Production: The Emergence of Governance in the FreeBSD Project Stefano De Paoli, Vincenzo D’Andrea and Maurizio Teli, Why Free Software Is Not the Antonym of Commercial Software: Two Case Studies from Corporate and Volunteer Based Projects Francesca Musiani, Caring About the Plumbing: On the Importance of Architectures in Social Studies of (Peer-to-Peer) Technology Michel Bauwens, From the Theory of Peer Production to the Production of Peer Production Theory Jakob Rigi, Peer to Peer Production as the Alternative to Capitalism: A New Communist Horizon Christian Siefkes, Beyond Digital Plenty: Building Blocks for Physical Peer Production Jean Zin, Changing the System of Production Stefan Meretz, Peer Production and Societal Transformation: Ten Patterns Developed by the Oekonux Project Maurizio Teli, Peer Production and Societal Transformation: A Practice-Based Perspective Toni Prug, A Note on Evaluation Processes for Social Phenomena with Ambitious Claims