Hi everyone,
I am doing a lit review on the topic of democratic decision making on Wikipedia. I wonder - what are your favorite papers on this subject?
So far the most extensive discussions I've found are
Black, Laura, Ted Welser, Jocely DeGroot, and Daniel Cosley. 2008 "Wikipedia is not a democracy": Deliberation and policy-making in an online community." Hilbert, Martin. 2009. The Maturing Concept of E-Democracy: From E-Voting and Online Consultations to Democratic Value Out of Jumbled Online Chatter Klemp. Nathaniel J. 2010. From Town-Halls to Wikis: Exploring Wikipedia's Implications for Deliberative Democracy. Reagle's 2010 book subchapter on "Polling and Voting". Firer-Blaess, Sylvain 2011. Wikipedia: an Example for Electronic Democracy? Decision, Discipline and Discourse in the Collaborative Encyclopedia
What did I miss?
In the broader scope, I'd also appreciate suggestions as to the best readings in the area of Internet communities and democracy. To be more precise, let me stress the word community here. The literature in e-democracy and related terms is of course very broad, but I am interested in studies of how online communities (like Wikipedia) make (quasi?)democratic decisions. Wikipedians vote, and Wikimedians in general do as well. How unique are they (are we...) in this? Who else has such votes? Redditors? Slashdotians? Other groups? What are the turnouts, trends? Would appreciate any information that comes to mind.
We look at some of these issues in:
Joyce, E., Pike, J. C., & Butler, B. S. (2013). Rules and Roles vs. Consensus Self-Governed Deliberative Mass Collaboration Bureaucracies. American Behavioral Scientist, 57(5), 576-594.
Joyce, E., Butler, B., & Pike, J. (2011, February). Handling flammable materials: Wikipedia biographies of living persons as contentious objects. InProceedings of the 2011 iConference (pp. 25-32). ACM.
(and there are references to other related papers there as well).
On Sep 28, 2013, at 8:56 AM, Piotr Konieczny wrote:
Hi everyone,
I am doing a lit review on the topic of democratic decision making on Wikipedia. I wonder - what are your favorite papers on this subject?
So far the most extensive discussions I've found are
Black, Laura, Ted Welser, Jocely DeGroot, and Daniel Cosley. 2008 "Wikipedia is not a democracy”: Deliberation and policy-making in an online community." Hilbert, Martin. 2009. The Maturing Concept of E-Democracy: From E-Voting and Online Consultations to Democratic Value Out of Jumbled Online Chatter Klemp. Nathaniel J. 2010. From Town-Halls to Wikis: Exploring Wikipedia's Implications for Deliberative Democracy. Reagle's 2010 book subchapter on "Polling and Voting". Firer-Blaess, Sylvain 2011. Wikipedia: an Example for Electronic Democracy? Decision, Discipline and Discourse in the Collaborative Encyclopedia
What did I miss?
In the broader scope, I'd also appreciate suggestions as to the best readings in the area of Internet communities and democracy. To be more precise, let me stress the word community here. The literature in e-democracy and related terms is of course very broad, but I am interested in studies of how online communities (like Wikipedia) make (quasi?)democratic decisions. Wikipedians vote, and Wikimedians in general do as well. How unique are they (are we...) in this? Who else has such votes? Redditors? Slashdotians? Other groups? What are the turnouts, trends? Would appreciate any information that comes to mind.
-- Piotr Konieczny, PhD http://hanyang.academia.edu/PiotrKonieczny http://scholar.google.com/citations?user=gdV8_AEAAAAJ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Piotrus
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I like Lam et al's work on deletion decisions in the English Wikipedia: The Effects of Group Composition on Decision Quality in a Social Production Community http://www.grouplens.org/node/450
Cheers, Morten
On 28 September 2013 07:56, Piotr Konieczny piokon@post.pl wrote:
Hi everyone,
I am doing a lit review on the topic of democratic decision making on Wikipedia. I wonder - what are your favorite papers on this subject?
So far the most extensive discussions I've found are
Black, Laura, Ted Welser, Jocely DeGroot, and Daniel Cosley. 2008 "Wikipedia is not a democracy”: Deliberation and policy-making in an online community." Hilbert, Martin. 2009. The Maturing Concept of E-Democracy: From E-Voting and Online Consultations to Democratic Value Out of Jumbled Online Chatter Klemp. Nathaniel J. 2010. From Town-Halls to Wikis: Exploring Wikipedia's Implications for Deliberative Democracy. Reagle's 2010 book subchapter on "Polling and Voting". Firer-Blaess, Sylvain 2011. Wikipedia: an Example for Electronic Democracy? Decision, Discipline and Discourse in the Collaborative Encyclopedia
What did I miss?
In the broader scope, I'd also appreciate suggestions as to the best readings in the area of Internet communities and democracy. To be more precise, let me stress the word community here. The literature in e-democracy and related terms is of course very broad, but I am interested in studies of how online communities (like Wikipedia) make (quasi?)democratic decisions. Wikipedians vote, and Wikimedians in general do as well. How unique are they (are we...) in this? Who else has such votes? Redditors? Slashdotians? Other groups? What are the turnouts, trends? Would appreciate any information that comes to mind.
-- Piotr Konieczny, PhDhttp://hanyang.academia.edu/PiotrKoniecznyhttp://scholar.google.com/citation...
Wiki-research-l mailing list Wiki-research-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wiki-research-l
- Kriplean, T., Beschastnikh, I., McDonald, D. W., & Golder, S. A., (2007) Community, consensus, coercion, control: cs*w or how policy mediates mass participation. GROUP (pp. 167-177). - Forte, A., Larco, V., & Bruckman, A. (2009). Decentralization in Wikipedia Governance. Journal Manage. Info. Sys. 26(1), 49-72.
On Sat, Sep 28, 2013 at 10:25 AM, Morten Wang nettrom@gmail.com wrote:
I like Lam et al's work on deletion decisions in the English Wikipedia: The Effects of Group Composition on Decision Quality in a Social Production Community http://www.grouplens.org/node/450
Cheers, Morten
On 28 September 2013 07:56, Piotr Konieczny piokon@post.pl wrote:
Hi everyone,
I am doing a lit review on the topic of democratic decision making on Wikipedia. I wonder - what are your favorite papers on this subject?
So far the most extensive discussions I've found are
Black, Laura, Ted Welser, Jocely DeGroot, and Daniel Cosley. 2008 "Wikipedia is not a democracy”: Deliberation and policy-making in an online community." Hilbert, Martin. 2009. The Maturing Concept of E-Democracy: From E-Voting and Online Consultations to Democratic Value Out of Jumbled Online Chatter Klemp. Nathaniel J. 2010. From Town-Halls to Wikis: Exploring Wikipedia's Implications for Deliberative Democracy. Reagle's 2010 book subchapter on "Polling and Voting". Firer-Blaess, Sylvain 2011. Wikipedia: an Example for Electronic Democracy? Decision, Discipline and Discourse in the Collaborative Encyclopedia
What did I miss?
In the broader scope, I'd also appreciate suggestions as to the best readings in the area of Internet communities and democracy. To be more precise, let me stress the word community here. The literature in e-democracy and related terms is of course very broad, but I am interested in studies of how online communities (like Wikipedia) make (quasi?)democratic decisions. Wikipedians vote, and Wikimedians in general do as well. How unique are they (are we...) in this? Who else has such votes? Redditors? Slashdotians? Other groups? What are the turnouts, trends? Would appreciate any information that comes to mind.
-- Piotr Konieczny, PhDhttp://hanyang.academia.edu/PiotrKoniecznyhttp://scholar.google.com/citation...
Wiki-research-l mailing list Wiki-research-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wiki-research-l
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I really like Ayelet Oz's study of the decision-making process preceding the 2011 SOPA blackout: http://firstmonday.org/ojs/index.php/fm/article/view/4043/3380
On Sat, Sep 28, 2013 at 6:29 PM, Aaron Halfaker aaron.halfaker@gmail.comwrote:
- Kriplean, T., Beschastnikh, I., McDonald, D. W., & Golder, S. A.,
(2007) Community, consensus, coercion, control: cs*w or how policy mediates mass participation. GROUP (pp. 167-177).
- Forte, A., Larco, V., & Bruckman, A. (2009). Decentralization in
Wikipedia Governance. Journal Manage. Info. Sys. 26(1), 49-72.
On Sat, Sep 28, 2013 at 10:25 AM, Morten Wang nettrom@gmail.com wrote:
I like Lam et al's work on deletion decisions in the English Wikipedia: The Effects of Group Composition on Decision Quality in a Social Production Community http://www.grouplens.org/node/450
Cheers, Morten
On 28 September 2013 07:56, Piotr Konieczny piokon@post.pl wrote:
Hi everyone,
I am doing a lit review on the topic of democratic decision making on Wikipedia. I wonder - what are your favorite papers on this subject?
So far the most extensive discussions I've found are
Black, Laura, Ted Welser, Jocely DeGroot, and Daniel Cosley. 2008 "Wikipedia is not a democracy”: Deliberation and policy-making in an online community." Hilbert, Martin. 2009. The Maturing Concept of E-Democracy: From E-Voting and Online Consultations to Democratic Value Out of Jumbled Online Chatter Klemp. Nathaniel J. 2010. From Town-Halls to Wikis: Exploring Wikipedia's Implications for Deliberative Democracy. Reagle's 2010 book subchapter on "Polling and Voting". Firer-Blaess, Sylvain 2011. Wikipedia: an Example for Electronic Democracy? Decision, Discipline and Discourse in the Collaborative Encyclopedia
What did I miss?
In the broader scope, I'd also appreciate suggestions as to the best readings in the area of Internet communities and democracy. To be more precise, let me stress the word community here. The literature in e-democracy and related terms is of course very broad, but I am interested in studies of how online communities (like Wikipedia) make (quasi?)democratic decisions. Wikipedians vote, and Wikimedians in general do as well. How unique are they (are we...) in this? Who else has such votes? Redditors? Slashdotians? Other groups? What are the turnouts, trends? Would appreciate any information that comes to mind.
-- Piotr Konieczny, PhDhttp://hanyang.academia.edu/PiotrKoniecznyhttp://scholar.google.com/citation...
Wiki-research-l mailing list Wiki-research-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wiki-research-l
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