[CITASA] Authority in online communities

MO
Mathieu O'Neil
Mon, Apr 20, 2009 6:48 AM

Hi all-

I tried to post the following annoucement a few weeks ago but it did not appear on the list, perhaps due to some problem with my email address. So, here goes again. The book constitutes an attempt to understand how Weber's account of the need for power to be legitimated operates in online communities. 

Best,
mathieu


 

Cyberchiefs: Autonomy and Authority in Online Tribes

Mathieu O’Neil

April 2009

 

PB / £ 17.99 / $ 32.95 / 978-0-7453-2796-9 /  215mm x 135mm  / 242 pp

‘Going against all easy celebrations of an Internet culture without authority or power structures, Cyberchiefs offers an important and relevant account of the innovations in forms of authority expressed by the social dynamics of Internet group formations.’

Tiziana Terranova, associate professor of Sociology of Communications and Cultural Studies at the University of Naples ‘L’Orientale’ and author of Network Culture: Politics for the Information Age.

 

People are inventing new ways of working together on the internet. Decentralised production thrives on weblogs, wikis and free software projects. In Cyberchiefs, Mathieu O’Neil focuses on the regulation of these working relationships. He examines the transformation of leadership and expertise in online networks, and the emergence of innovative forms of participatory politics.

What are the costs and benefits of alternatives to hierarchical organisation? Using case studies of online projects or ‘tribes’ such as the radical Primitivism archive, the Daily Kos political weblog, the Debian free software project, and Wikipedia, O’Neil shows that leaders must support maximum autonomy for participants, and he analyses the tensions generated by this distribution of authority.

Mathieu O’Neil is Adjunct Research Fellow at the Australian National University in the Australian Demographic and Social Research Institute, and Principal Researcher at Australia’s Department of Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy. He has contributed articles to Le Monde diplomatique, Manière de voir and Factsheet 5. 

Publisher webpage (US): http://us.macmillan.com/cyberchiefs

Obligatory Facebook page: Coming soon!

 


Dr Mathieu O'Neil
Adjunct Research Fellow
Australian Demographic and Social Research Institute
College of Arts and Social Science
The Australian National University

E-mail: mathieu.oneil@anu.edu.au
Tel.: (61 02) 61 25 38 00
Web: http://adsri.anu.edu.au/people/visitors/mathieu.php
Mail: Coombs Building, 9
Canberra, ACT 0200 - AUSTRALIA

Hi all- I tried to post the following annoucement a few weeks ago but it did not appear on the list, perhaps due to some problem with my email address. So, here goes again. The book constitutes an attempt to understand how Weber's account of the need for power to be legitimated operates in online communities.  Best, mathieu *******   Cyberchiefs: Autonomy and Authority in Online Tribes Mathieu O’Neil April 2009   PB / £ 17.99 / $ 32.95 / 978-0-7453-2796-9 /  215mm x 135mm  / 242 pp ‘Going against all easy celebrations of an Internet culture without authority or power structures, Cyberchiefs offers an important and relevant account of the innovations in forms of authority expressed by the social dynamics of Internet group formations.’ Tiziana Terranova, associate professor of Sociology of Communications and Cultural Studies at the University of Naples ‘L’Orientale’ and author of Network Culture: Politics for the Information Age.   People are inventing new ways of working together on the internet. Decentralised production thrives on weblogs, wikis and free software projects. In Cyberchiefs, Mathieu O’Neil focuses on the regulation of these working relationships. He examines the transformation of leadership and expertise in online networks, and the emergence of innovative forms of participatory politics. What are the costs and benefits of alternatives to hierarchical organisation? Using case studies of online projects or ‘tribes’ such as the radical Primitivism archive, the Daily Kos political weblog, the Debian free software project, and Wikipedia, O’Neil shows that leaders must support maximum autonomy for participants, and he analyses the tensions generated by this distribution of authority. Mathieu O’Neil is Adjunct Research Fellow at the Australian National University in the Australian Demographic and Social Research Institute, and Principal Researcher at Australia’s Department of Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy. He has contributed articles to Le Monde diplomatique, Manière de voir and Factsheet 5.  Publisher webpage (US): http://us.macmillan.com/cyberchiefs Obligatory Facebook page: Coming soon!   **** Dr Mathieu O'Neil Adjunct Research Fellow Australian Demographic and Social Research Institute College of Arts and Social Science The Australian National University E-mail: mathieu.oneil@anu.edu.au Tel.: (61 02) 61 25 38 00 Web: http://adsri.anu.edu.au/people/visitors/mathieu.php Mail: Coombs Building, 9 Canberra, ACT 0200 - AUSTRALIA