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at the University of Canberra’s News and Media Research Centre for their unwavering support and sound advice. Thanks also to my research associate Xiaolan Cai as well as to my research partner Rob Ackland at the Australian National University’s Virtual Observatory for the Study of Online Networks for helping us map the online network of peer production actors. Thanks to the Australian National University’s School of Sociology for its continuing support. I am grateful to the University of Canberra’s Faculty of Arts and Design for supporting my Outside Studies Program in 2019, which enabled me to focus on this project and to work with colleagues overseas: George Dafermos (Integral Cooperative, Heraklion), Laure Muselli (Télécom Paris), Giacomo Poderi (IT University of Copenhagen), and last but not least Mélanie Dulong de Rosnay and Francesca Musiani (Centre Internet et Société, CNRS). My parents Mike and Charmian kindly hosted during my time in Paris. At the time of writing (April 2020) my father is fighting Covid‐19. My parents’ politics and humor inspired me. I dedicate this Handbook to them.

      Christian would like to thank his colleagues at Bremen and later at Chemnitz University. Both places provided the intellectual environment and academic workplace necessary to pursue such long‐term project. I owe special thanks to my student assistants Lea Neubauer who helped us with the transcriptions of the interviews and Jessica Giesa who compiled the lists of tables and illustrations. Editing this volume and collaborating with Mathieu and Sophie has been an inspiring learning process and I thank them for their dedication, inquisitiveness, and their eye for all the many details that were necessary to make this book happen.

      Sophie would like to thank the professors and graduate students in the Communication Studies Department at McGill University who have continued to give her invaluable advice, intellectual support, and community. Joining Mathieu and Christian in editing this Handbook at the beginning of my PhD was at first daunting, but it has proven to be very rewarding. Now that these two long‐term projects are coming to an end – the PhD and the volume – I remain inspired by the many collectives and groups who use the practice of peer production to reimagine the world they want to live in. I dedicate this Handbook to them. Finally, heartfelt thanks to Christian and Mathieu; it has been a delight working with you!

      Part I Introduction

      1 The Duality of Peer Production: Infrastructure for the Digital Commons, Free Labor for Free‐Riding Firms

       Mathieu O’Neil, Sophie Toupin, & Christian Pentzold

      This introductory chapter examines a series of productive tensions located in and around peer production: we interrogate the meaning of peer‐to‐peer infrastructure models and find that some forms of peer infrastructure have thrived, whilst others were effectively banned. We review Yochai Benkler’s influential theorization of “commons‐based peer production,” and ask to what extent it embodies Western, first‐world assumptions. We evaluate the relationship of peer production to the dominant economy, considering the rich scholarship on peer production’s transformational potential, which was inspired by Benkler’s model and is often imbued with utopian overtones. At the same time peer infrastructure plays a central role in the digital economy, and we critically examine political economy understandings which hold that peer production has been recuperated by capitalism and enabled new forms of labor exploitation. We also analyze the organizational form which facilitated the emergence of hybridization between commercial firms and communal projects, outline the aims of this Handbook, and summarize its structure and content.

      2 Grammar of Peer Production

       Vasilis Kostakis & Michael Bauwens

      In 2005, Michel Bauwens published The Political Economy of Peer Production, which discussed the principles, characteristics, and the future of the then nascent ecosystem of peer production. This chapter revisits Bauwens’ 2005 article, adopting, expanding, and refining the operational concepts – or “grammar” – he used to define peer‐production projects and the institutional ecosystems that sustain them. Our aim is to provide a framework that would give a theoretical underpinning to the transformative practices of peer production. In a time of deep environmental, social and political crisis, it is important to understand how a new kind of society, based on the centrality of the commons and within a reformed market and state, is possible. This chapter, thus, discusses and introduces new paradigmatic ways of value creation that have the potential to be more radically inclusive and sustainable.

      3 Political Economy of Peer Production

       Benjamin J. Birkinbine

      This chapter provides a framework for understanding the political economy of peer production. As such, I interrogate the intersection of peer production and capitalism along two axes. First, I contextualize the rise of peer production within broader structural changes occurring within capitalism and evaluate the extent to which peer production contradicts, or reinforces, these global economic trends. Second, I draw from more recent theories of commons value circuits to position peer production as dialectically situated between capital and the commons, which highlights the ways in which communities of peer producers intersect with circuits of capital accumulation. The question I explore in the latter part of the chapter is whether the emergent cultural practices within peer production have the capability to subvert the prevailing tendencies of capitalism and offer a path toward a post‐capitalist future.

      4 Social Norms and Rules in Peer Production

       Christian Pentzold

      The regulation of peer‐production projects is achieved by the users themselves. These forms of self‐organization and self‐management depend on shared social norms and have generated, in turn, sets of rules. Some of them characterize the larger population of peer‐production projects; others seem to be an attribute of particular projects. The chapter provides an overview and comparison of peer production’s signature norms and rules, it traces their origins and describes their implications for collaboration and editorial work.

      5 Cultures of Peer Production

       Michael Stevenson

      How can we make sense of cultures of peer production, which exist in diverse national, cultural, and language contexts, span several industries and domains, and comprise a range of different organizational structures? To set the groundwork for such an understanding, this chapter argues that it is necessary to see that peer production is, by and large, a form of cultural production, and thus bears structural similarities to existing cultural fields like art, literature, and journalism. The chapter shows how (1) peer‐production projects are clearly embedded in existing cultural fields, and often represent an autonomous form of production that seeks to resist certain economic and political pressures in favor of core values such as meritocracy and openness and (2) such autonomy is achieved through the enactment of those core values, which are in turn related to the social hierarchies, forms of exclusion, and other limitations that characterize these projects and the groups of people who populate them.

      6 Commons‐Based Peer Production and Virtue (reprint)

       Helen Nissenbaum & Yochai Benkler

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