1539 lines
147 KiB
BibTeX
1539 lines
147 KiB
BibTeX
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@article{rickardsson_geografiska_2024,
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title = {Geografiska rötter och politiska vingar: {Hur} klass och områden formar och sorterar oss utifrån politiska preferenser},
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volume = {126},
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issn = {0039-0747},
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url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/geografiska-rötter-och-politiska-vingar-hur-klass/docview/3168416243/se-2?accountid=12861},
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abstract = {This study investigates how migration patterns between rural and urban areas relate to social class and political party preferences in Sweden, using data from the 2021 SOM survey. The analyses reveal that individuals from different backgrounds have distinct migration patterns. Individuals who grew up in rural areas but moved to cities have significantly different political preferences than individuals who grew up and still reside in rural areas. The results indicate that KD and SD mainly attract rural voters, while L, MP, M, and V primarily attract urban residents. Individuals with certain characteristics are likelier to choose specific types of residential areas and have political preferences typical for their area of choice. This suggests a geographical sorting of different groups into rural and urban areas and a geographic political divergence (in support of SD, KD) and convergence (in support of C, S, L, M) in party preferences.},
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language = {English},
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number = {5},
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journal = {Statsvetenskaplig Tidskrift},
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author = {Rickardsson, Jonna and Lundåsen, Susanne Wallman},
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year = {2024},
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note = {Place: Lund
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Publisher: Fahlbeckska Stiftelsen},
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keywords = {Convergence, Social classes, Migration, Urban areas, Rural areas, Migration patterns, Political parties, Preferences, Residential areas, Rural communities, Urban population},
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pages = {1005},
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annote = {Copyright - Copyright Fahlbeckska Stiftelsen 2024},
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annote = {Last updated - 2025-02-19},
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}
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@article{canche_mapping_2022,
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title = {Mapping, {Organizing}, and {Visualizing} {Interdependent} {Events} ({MOVIE}): {A} rigorous analytic framework and cost-free software application designed to model temporal and dynamic complex realist structures in social research settings},
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volume = {15},
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||
issn = {1748-0612},
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||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/mapping-organizing-visualizing-interdependent/docview/2734315628/se-2?accountid=12861},
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doi = {10.1177/20597991221119012},
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abstract = {The study of the social world involves multiple, multidimensional, and endlessly dynamic competing systems evolving over time. This inherent complexity, however, does not mean that the social world is chaotic, random, or unstructured. Rather, structural forms do emerge and co-exist in social settings. It is the emergence, maintenance, and decay of these structures that allows researchers to detect temporary stability and provides them with the means to make predictions about continuity and change in social dynamics. Arguably then, the main challenge in the study of the social world consist of developing robust and consistent strategies or tools capable of tracing, mapping, or retrieving these structural forms in order to ultimately model this social complexity. Accordingly, the overarching purpose of this study consists of addressing this analytic and methodological challenge by proposing a groundbreaking analytic framework, and its corresponding software application, designed to extract temporal and dynamic structures in the social world relying on complex realism, complex systems, dynamic temporal network analyses, and data science and visualization techniques. Together, these frameworks constitute the foundations of Mapping, Organizing, and Visualizing Interdependent Events (MOVIE), an analytic framework [and software application] designed to ease the understanding of, individually-produced or interactively-generated, events and knowledge evolution, by tracing and recreating the processes that may have affected participants' experiences, outcomes, and standpoints. To demonstrate MOVIE's performance and rigor in capturing and recreating the dynamic complexity of micro-level interactions, the analyses relied on publicly available data sources on foreign policy and conflict resolution. All data elements and tools are provided with this study to make these analyses fully transparent and reproducible. MOVIE can trace/recreate the temporal elements embedded in existing qualitative databases (e.g. those generated with NVivo/MAXQDA/Atlas.ti), even if they were created without considering their dynamic time-evolving features, whose meaning-building relevance may help inform policy planning and action.},
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language = {English},
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number = {3},
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journal = {Methodological Innovations Online},
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author = {Canché, Manuel S González},
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month = nov,
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year = {2022},
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note = {Place: Plymouth
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Publisher: University of Plymouth, Roland Levinsky Bldg},
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keywords = {Software, Maps, Time, Social Sciences: Comprehensive Works, Conflict resolution, Foreign policy, Methodological problems, Motion pictures, Social dynamics, Social systems, Data, Policy making},
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pages = {263},
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annote = {Copyright - Copyright University of Plymouth, Roland Levinsky Bldg Nov 2022},
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annote = {Last updated - 2023-08-09},
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}
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@article{gonzalez_canche_manuel_s_mapping_2022,
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title = {Mapping, {Organizing}, and {Visualizing} {Interdependent} {Events} ({MOVIE}): {A} rigorous analytic framework and cost-free software application designed to model temporal and dynamic complex realist structures in social research settings},
|
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volume = {15},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/mapping-organizing-visualizing-interdependent/docview/2733981152/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.1177/20597991221119012},
|
||
abstract = {The study of the social world involves multiple, multidimensional, and endlessly dynamic competing systems evolving over time. This inherent complexity, however, does not mean that the social world is chaotic, random, or unstructured. Rather, structural forms do emerge and co-exist in social settings. It is the emergence, maintenance, and decay of these structures that allows researchers to detect temporary stability and provides them with the means to make predictions about continuity and change in social dynamics. Arguably then, the main challenge in the study of the social world consist of developing robust and consistent strategies or tools capable of tracing, mapping, or retrieving these structural forms in order to ultimately model this social complexity. Accordingly, the overarching purpose of this study consists of addressing this analytic and methodological challenge by proposing a groundbreaking analytic framework, and its corresponding software application, designed to extract temporal and dynamic structures in the social world relying on complex realism, complex systems, dynamic temporal network analyses, and data science and visualization techniques. Together, these frameworks constitute the foundations of Mapping, Organizing, and Visualizing Interdependent Events (MOVIE), an analytic framework [and software application] designed to ease the understanding of, individually-produced or interactively-generated, events and knowledge evolution, by tracing and recreating the processes that may have affected participants’ experiences, outcomes, and standpoints. To demonstrate MOVIE’s performance and rigor in capturing and recreating the dynamic complexity of micro-level interactions, the analyses relied on publicly available data sources on foreign policy and conflict resolution. All data elements and tools are provided with this study to make these analyses fully transparent and reproducible. MOVIE can trace/recreate the temporal elements embedded in existing qualitative databases (e.g. those generated with NVivo/MAXQDA/Atlas.ti), even if they were created without considering their dynamic time-evolving features, whose meaning-building relevance may help inform policy planning and action.},
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language = {English},
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number = {3},
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journal = {Methodological Innovations},
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author = {{González Canché Manuel S}},
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month = nov,
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year = {2022},
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note = {Place: London
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Publisher: Sage Publications Ltd.},
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keywords = {Databases, Social research, Software, social dynamics, Network analysis, Maps, Visualization, Time, Data science, Sciences: Comprehensive Works, Analytic frame, Application, Complex system, complex systems, and complex realism, Complexity, Conflict resolution, cost-free software, data science and interactive data visualization of qualitative evidence, data science democratization, Dynamic network analysis, Environmental, Foreign policy, Mapping, Methodological problems, Motion pictures, network analysis of qualitative data, no-code, Social complexity, Social dynamics, Social environment, Social systems, synchronous and asynchronous network modeling, Temporal and dynamic network modeling, Temporal network, transparent and reproducible qualitative modeling},
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pages = {263--288},
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annote = {Copyright - © The Author(s) 2022. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution – Non-Commercial License https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.},
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annote = {Last updated - 2024-10-02},
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||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Environmental},
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||
}
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@article{menendez-caravaca_exploring_2021,
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title = {Exploring the link between free and open source software and the collaborative economy: {A} {Delphi}-based scenario for the year 2025},
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volume = {173},
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||
issn = {00401625},
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||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/exploring-link-between-free-open-source-software/docview/2604532086/se-2?accountid=12861},
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doi = {10.1016/j.techfore.2021.121087},
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abstract = {Despite the growth experienced by the Collaborative Economy in recent years, there are still unexplored gaps within this phenomenon. One of the areas of study with scarce literature is linked with the impact of the Information and Communication Technologies based on collaborative environments, such as Free and Open Source Software, on the spread of the Collaborative Economy. Some questions are raised, such as: (1) To what extent do organizations linked with Collaborative Economy make use of Free and Open Source Software?, (2) What are the incentives that motivate the implementation of Free and Open Source Software in Collaborative Economy companies?, (3) What use do Collaborative Economy companies give to Free and Open Source Software?, and (4) Is there a greater use of Free and Open Source Software expected for the coming years among these organizations? To answer these questions, a study based on the Delphi method has been designed. To this end, a panel of 15 high-level experts in the field was formed. From the consensus of the experts, a significant role for Free and Open Source Software in the different collaborative components and industries is evident, with the current levels practically being maintained by the year 2025.},
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language = {English},
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journal = {Technological Forecasting and Social Change},
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author = {Menéndez-Caravaca, Eloísa and Bueno, Salvador and Gallego, M Dolores},
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month = dec,
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year = {2021},
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note = {Place: New York
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Publisher: Elsevier Science Ltd.},
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keywords = {Open source software, Organizations, Sociology, Information technology, Collaboration, Open source, Software, Incentives, Companies, Public domain, Freeware, Property, Free and open-source software, Delphi method, Fourth Industrial Revolution, Collaborative economy, Delphi, Questions},
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pages = {1},
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||
annote = {Copyright - Copyright Elsevier Science Ltd. Dec 2021},
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annote = {Last updated - 2023-12-05},
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}
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@article{standlee_alecea_free_2021,
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title = {Free {Software}, the {Internet}, and {Global} {Communities} of {Resistance}: {Hacking} the {Global}},
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volume = {50},
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||
issn = {00943061},
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||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/free-software-internet-global-communities/docview/2568263056/se-2?accountid=12861},
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||
doi = {10.1177/00943061211036051y},
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language = {English},
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number = {5},
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journal = {Contemporary Sociology},
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author = {{Standlee Alecea}},
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month = sep,
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||
year = {2021},
|
||
note = {Place: Washington
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||
Publisher: Sage Publications Ltd.},
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keywords = {Resistance, Software, Sociology--Abstracting, Bibliographies, Statistics},
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pages = {438--440},
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annote = {Copyright - © American Sociological Association 2021},
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||
annote = {Last updated - 2023-06-07},
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}
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@article{dellera_value_2020,
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title = {Value capture in open innovation processes with radical circles: {A} qualitative analysis of firms' collaborations with {Slow} {Food}, {Memphis}, and {Free} {Software} {Foundation}},
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volume = {158},
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||
issn = {00401625},
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||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/value-capture-open-innovation-processes-with/docview/2456877123/se-2?accountid=12861},
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doi = {10.1016/j.techfore.2020.120128},
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abstract = {Despite the wealth of research on open innovation, the mechanisms that enable capturing value through adopting an open innovation approach remain largely unexplored. In this study, we focus on open innovation processes among firms and radical circles and shed light on the related value capture mechanisms. We rely on a detailed qualitative case analysis of collaborations between firms and three radical circles (i.e., Slow Food, Memphis, and the Free Software Foundation). Our case studies highlight that the firms captured value from collaborating with these radical circles through developing internal assets (reputational, organizational, intellectual and human, and technological) and new business models. Starting from these insights, the study offers several contributions to open innovation research as well as interesting avenues for future inquiry into this topic.},
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language = {English},
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||
journal = {Technological Forecasting and Social Change},
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author = {Dell'Era, Claudio and Di Minin, Alberto and Ferrigno, Giulio and Frattini, Federico and Landoni, Paolo and Verganti, Roberto},
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month = sep,
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||
year = {2020},
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||
note = {Place: New York
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||
Publisher: Elsevier Science Ltd.},
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||
keywords = {Sociology, Innovation, Qualitative research, Collaboration, Software, Companies, Case studies, Business, Innovations, Open innovation, Qualitative analysis, Value capture, Food, Memphis, Slow Food},
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pages = {1},
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||
annote = {Copyright - Copyright Elsevier Science Ltd. Sep 2020},
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||
annote = {Last updated - 2023-12-05},
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annote = {Name - Free Software Foundation},
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||
}
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@article{marks_confusion_2020,
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title = {Confusion and collectivism in the {ICT} sector: {Is} {FLOSS} the answer?},
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||
volume = {41},
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||
issn = {0143831X},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/confusion-collectivism-ict-sector-is-floss-answer/docview/2370374345/se-2?accountid=12861},
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||
doi = {10.1177/0143831X17695441},
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abstract = {Information and communication technology (ICT) workers rarely join trade unions. This is usually explained by the individualized nature of work. This article examines broader forms of collectivism for these workers, drawing on survey and interview data. The focus is on social class, attitudes towards unions and professional bodies and participation in the broader ICT community – specifically Free, Libre and Open Source Software (FLOSS). The findings reveal absence of formal collective frames of reference or organization, yet the creativity, autonomy and initiative central to the identity of ICT workers may offer opportunities for collectivization particularly with regard to participation in FLOSS communities.},
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language = {English},
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||
number = {1},
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||
journal = {Economic and Industrial Democracy},
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||
author = {Marks, Abigail and {Chillas Shiona} and Galloway, Laura and Maclean, Gavin},
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month = feb,
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||
year = {2020},
|
||
note = {Place: London
|
||
Publisher: Sage Publications Ltd.},
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||
keywords = {Open source software, Identity, Political Science, Communication, Information technology, open source software, Participation, Software, Social classes, Communications technology, Creativity, Autonomy, Property, Floss, 81393:Labor Unions and Similar Labor Organizations, Class, collectivism, Collectivism, Collectivization, Confusion, ICT workers, Labor unions, Professional attitudes, Social attitudes, Social class, Trade union, unions, Workers},
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||
pages = {167--188},
|
||
annote = {Copyright - © The Author(s) 2017},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2024-11-21},
|
||
}
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@article{muwanguzi_adoption_2019,
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title = {The adoption of open source software in {Uganda}: {Analyzing} stakeholders and their underlying interests},
|
||
volume = {58},
|
||
issn = {0160-791X},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/adoption-open-source-software-uganda-analyzing/docview/2312778145/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.1016/j.techsoc.2019.05.002},
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abstract = {•The executive branch, the legislature, and international donor agencies are the key stakeholders associated with OSS.•Primary stake holders include Telecommunications companies, proprietors of OSS-based companies, and OSS communities.•Secondary stakeholders include international organizations, local NGOs, universities, lecturers, instructors, and students.•ICT stakeholders were motivated by multiple but complimentary interests.},
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language = {English},
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||
journal = {Technology in Society},
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author = {Muwanguzi, Samuel and Musambira, George},
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||
month = aug,
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year = {2019},
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||
note = {Place: Oxford
|
||
Publisher: Elsevier Science Ltd.},
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||
keywords = {Open source software, Sociology, Telecommunications, Information technology, Copyright, Software, Companies, Communications technology, Stakeholders, Public domain, Freeware, Empirical analysis, Teachers, Property, Nongovernmental organizations--NGOs, Digital divide, College students, Colleges \& universities, Interest groups, International organizations, Legislatures, Policies, Uganda},
|
||
pages = {1},
|
||
annote = {Copyright - Copyright Elsevier Science Ltd. Aug 2019},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2024-10-02},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Uganda},
|
||
}
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@article{yuwei_lin_gendered_2019,
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title = {Gendered work culture in free/libre open source software development},
|
||
volume = {26},
|
||
issn = {09686673},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/gendered-work-culture-free-libre-open-source/docview/2257969279/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.1111/gwao.12255},
|
||
abstract = {This article adopts a feminist perspective to examine masculine work culture in the development of free/libre open source software. The authors draw on a case study of the ‘Heidi bug’ discovered during the development of the Mozilla Firefox web browser to examine how ‘gendered talk’ was (en)‐acted to facilitate ‘bricolage’ in an online work environment. Such gendered talks contain cultural references familiar to male developers. Though seemingly innocuous, such acts could be seen as a performance of gender that simply reflects the hegemonic heterosexual masculine culture manifested in an online virtual work space. The virtual work space therefore can be exclusive to those who shared the cultural references. Although it may not necessarily be ignorance or insensitivity of male developers, a more gender‐balanced, women‐friendly and inclusive workplace certainly would benefit from a more diverse environment. This article highlights the gendered aspect of software development through examining the language use and mainstream ‘bricolage’ practice, and establishes a compelling ground for enlarging the talent pool to include more women and integrating gender ethics (e.g., raising awareness of sensitive language and design approaches) into computer ethics education.},
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||
language = {English},
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||
number = {7},
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||
journal = {Gender, Work and Organization},
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||
author = {{Yu‐Wei Lin} and den Besten, Matthijs},
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month = jul,
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||
year = {2019},
|
||
note = {Place: Oxford
|
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Publisher: Blackwell Publishing Ltd.},
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||
keywords = {Open source software, Ethics, Qualitative research, Masculinity, Women, Business And Economics--Management, open innovation, Software, Feminism, Case studies, Internet, Software development, Case study, Public domain, Freeware, Property, Corporate culture, Free, Work environment, Consciousness, Computer ethics, Gender, Ability, Bricolage, Cultural change, free/libre open source software, gendered talks, Hegemony, heterohegemonic masculinity, Heterosexuality, humour, Ignorance, Language usage, Moral education, online virtual work space, Organizational culture, work cultures, Workplaces},
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pages = {1017--1031},
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||
annote = {Copyright - © 2019 John Wiley \& Sons Ltd},
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||
annote = {Last updated - 2024-11-25},
|
||
}
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@article{anderson_nicolai_2016,
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||
title = {Nicolai {J}. {Foss} and {Tina} {Saebi}, eds.: {Business} {Model} {Innovation}: {The} {Organizational} {Dimension}},
|
||
volume = {61},
|
||
issn = {00018392},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/nicolai-j-foss-tina-saebi-eds-business-model/docview/1876655309/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.1177/0001839216629108},
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||
abstract = {Foss, Nicolai J.; Saebi, Tina , eds.: Business Model Innovation: The Organizational Dimension. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015. 308 pp. \$99.00, cloth.},
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||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {2},
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||
journal = {Administrative Science Quarterly},
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||
author = {Anderson, Philip},
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||
month = jun,
|
||
year = {2016},
|
||
note = {Place: Thousand Oaks
|
||
Publisher: SAGE PUBLICATIONS, INC.},
|
||
keywords = {Sociology, Innovation, Business model, Organization, Models, Business models, Innovations, Service introduction},
|
||
pages = {NP17--NP19},
|
||
annote = {Copyright - © The Author(s) 2016},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2024-03-20},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{lakka_cross-national_2015,
|
||
title = {Cross-national analysis of the relation of {eGovernment} maturity and {OSS} growth},
|
||
volume = {99},
|
||
issn = {00401625},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/cross-national-analysis-relation-egovernment/docview/1732841796/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.1016/j.techfore.2015.06.024},
|
||
abstract = {The aims of this research are to explore and evaluate the nature of the relationship between open source software (OSS) and eGovernment maturity, as well as the factors impacting their development at a national level. The study proposes a theoretical framework, under the prism of which socio-economic, technological and institutional factors critical to eGovernment and OSS are revealed. The hypotheses are evaluated by means of an econometric model of simultaneous equations. In order to better gauge the results of the hypotheses, the model is evaluated over economic environments at different stages of development. Social development and OSS growth were found to be the most important facilitators for eGovernment maturity, across countries of all stages of development. Institutional quality, technological openness, freedom in press and the macro-economic environment exerted different weights of importance across different country groupings. Findings also suggest that technological infrastructure and innovation are important drivers for OSS growth across countries at all stages of development. Research results can provide useful input for research in eGov, as they open up new directions in the study of the relation with OSS.},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
journal = {Technological Forecasting and Social Change},
|
||
author = {Lakka, Spyridoula and Stamati, Teta and Michalakelis, Christos and Anagnostopoulos, Dimosthenis},
|
||
month = oct,
|
||
year = {2015},
|
||
note = {Place: New York
|
||
Publisher: Elsevier Science Ltd.},
|
||
keywords = {Open source software, Sociology, Socioeconomic factors, Studies, Hypotheses, Software, Open-source software, Econometrics, Economics, Electronic government, 5240:Software \& systems, 9130:Experiment/theoretical treatment, Economic, Technological change, Freeware, Innovations, Research \& development--R\&D, E-government, Property, sociology of technology, 1772:sociology of science, 1130:Economic theory, 1220:Social trends \& culture, Economic development, Freedoms, Economic models, Developmental stages, Economic factors, Maturity, Natural environment, Organizational aspects, Simultaneous equations, Social change, Social development},
|
||
pages = {132},
|
||
annote = {Copyright - Copyright Elsevier Science Ltd. Oct 2015},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2024-10-25},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Economic},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{yetis-larsson_networked_2015,
|
||
title = {Networked {Entrepreneurs}: {How} {Entrepreneurs} {Leverage} {Open} {Source} {Software} {Communities}: {PROD}},
|
||
volume = {59},
|
||
issn = {00027642},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/networked-entrepreneurs-how-leverage-open-source/docview/1664480239/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.1177/0002764214556809},
|
||
abstract = {In the contemporary economy, work is increasingly becoming freelance-based while moving online. Open source software communities are rapidly becoming arenas in which individuals identify, cocreate, and realize opportunities through shared resources and expertise. Operating in a communal setting, these individuals, who we label open entrepreneurs, work and collaborate with members of their own open source community. In this article, we investigate how networked work benefits open entrepreneurs, and in particular, we focus on how open entrepreneurs are connected to other community members and how these networks affect entrepreneurial processes. Our results suggest that through different aspects of networked work, open entrepreneurs fulfill their profit motives not only in the short term but also in the long term as their networking activities facilitate the overall functioning and sustainability of the community.},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {4},
|
||
journal = {The American Behavioral Scientist},
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||
author = {Yetis-Larsson, Zeynep and Teigland, Robin and Dovbysh, Olga},
|
||
month = apr,
|
||
year = {2015},
|
||
note = {Place: Thousand Oaks
|
||
Publisher: SAGE PUBLICATIONS, INC.},
|
||
keywords = {Open source software, Community, Studies, Copyright, Software, Psychology, Entrepreneurship, Internet, Social networks, 9130:Experiment/theoretical treatment, Public domain, 51321:Software Publishers, 8302:Software \& computer services industry, Software industry, Open innovation, Entrepreneurs, Property, Auditoriums, Freelance, Shared resource},
|
||
pages = {475},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - ABHSAU},
|
||
annote = {Copyright - Copyright SAGE PUBLICATIONS, INC. Apr 2015},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2024-12-06},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{bastin_media_2014,
|
||
title = {Media {Corpora}, {Text} {Mining}, and the {Sociological} {Imagination} - {A} {Free} {Software} {Text} {Mining} {Approach} to the {Framing} of {Julian} {Assange} by three news agencies using {R}. {TeMiS}},
|
||
volume = {122},
|
||
issn = {0759-1063, 0759-1063},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/media-corpora-text-mining-sociological/docview/1708505823/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.1177/0759106314521968},
|
||
abstract = {In this paper, we introduce R. TeMiS, a free software solution aimed at exploring new dimensions in text mining with a particular focus on media framing analysis. R. TeMiS is especially designed to provide help in a) the automation of corpus construction and management procedures based on the use of large media content data bases, and b) the extension of the range of statistical tools available to social scientists exploring texts through R coding (one and two-way tables, time series, hierarchical clustering, correspondence analysis, geographical mapping...). A case study on the media framing of Julian Assange from January 2010 to December 2011 is conducted. It is based on the analysis of a corpus of 667 news dispatches published in English by the three top international news agencies: Agence France-Presse (AFP), Reuters and Associated Press (AP). Adapted from the source document.},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
journal = {BMS, Bulletin de Methodologie Sociologique},
|
||
author = {Bastin, Gilles and Bouchet-Valat, Milan},
|
||
month = apr,
|
||
year = {2014},
|
||
note = {Publisher: Sage Publications, London UK},
|
||
keywords = {Management, Mass Media, Imagination, article, Computer Software, research methods/tools, 0104: methodology and research technology, Mass Media Effects, Text Mining R Media Studies Correspondence Analysis Geographical Mapping Framing Analysis News Agencies Assange},
|
||
pages = {5--25},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - BBMSE2},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2015-09-01},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Mass Media; Computer Software; Management; Mass Media Effects; Imagination},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{de_lima_free_2013,
|
||
title = {Free {Software} {Culture} and {Development}: {An} {Analysis} on {Potentials} and {Limits} in and beyond the {Context} of the '{New} {Economy}'},
|
||
issn = {0254-1106, 0254-1106},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/free-software-culture-development-analysis-on/docview/1629330948/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
abstract = {This article analyzes the potentials and limits of the free software culture and the products derived from it in what concerns the promotion of economic and social development in the context of the 'new economy' and the alternatives to it. It examines the incentives and constraints to innovation in its different senses, generated by free software as goods technically distinct from proprietary software and developed on the basis of specific values and interests. It also reflects on their limitations and capabilities in relation of the promotion of development strategies aimed not only at economic growth based on technological improvement, but especially at generating social opportunities. Adapted from the source document.},
|
||
language = {Portuguese},
|
||
number = {102},
|
||
journal = {Revista Critica de Ciencias Sociais},
|
||
author = {de Lima, Leonardo Santos},
|
||
month = dec,
|
||
year = {2013},
|
||
note = {Publisher: Centro de Estudos Sociais, Coimbra Portugal},
|
||
keywords = {Innovations, article, Computer Software, Values, 0749: social change and economic development, access asymmetry economic and social development free software information and communication technology new economy technological innovation, Cultural Change, Development Strategies, Economic Development, market structures \& consumer behavior, Social Development},
|
||
pages = {71--88},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - RCCSFY},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2014-12-01},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {Number of references - 37},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Computer Software; Economic Development; Cultural Change; Innovations; Values; Development Strategies; Social Development},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{barron_free_2013,
|
||
title = {Free software production as critical social practice},
|
||
volume = {42},
|
||
issn = {03085147},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/free-software-production-as-critical-social/docview/2089824849/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.1080/03085147.2013.791510},
|
||
abstract = {This paper analyses the phenomenon of free and open source software (FOSS) in the light of Luc Boltanski and Ève Chiapello's The new spirit of capitalism. It argues that collaborative FOSS production by volunteer software developers is a species of critical social practice in Boltanski and Chiapello's sense: rooted in resistance to capitalist social relations, and yet also a source of values that justify the new routes to profitability associated with contemporary network capitalism. Advanced via collective projects that are sustained by hacker norms and privately legislated 'copyleft' law, the FOSS ethos is apparently antithetical to private property-based accumulation. Yet it can be shown to embody the 'new spirit of capitalism' in its most distilled form; moreover FOSS developers have instituted new forms of property and new modes of profit creation around software that are in the process of being adapted for use in other economic sectors. Meanwhile, the private law constraints on profit-seeking that have emerged from the FOSS movement are counteracting some of the social pathologies that accompany network capitalism only to consolidate others. The paper concludes by identifying likely bases for a renewal of critique given these realities.},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {4},
|
||
journal = {Economy and Society},
|
||
author = {Barron, Anne},
|
||
month = nov,
|
||
year = {2013},
|
||
note = {Place: Abingdon
|
||
Publisher: Taylor \& Francis LLC},
|
||
keywords = {Open source software, Law, open source, Resistance, Business And Economics, free software, Software, reputational capital, Free software, Property, Capitalism, Economic theory, Free and open-source software, Profitability, Profits, Free, Accumulation, copyleft, Economic sectors, immaterial labour, new spirit of capitalism, Private property, Renewal, Social relations},
|
||
pages = {597--625},
|
||
annote = {Copyright - © 2013 Taylor \& Francis},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2024-12-06},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{barron_free_2013-1,
|
||
title = {Free software production as critical social practice},
|
||
volume = {42},
|
||
issn = {0308-5147, 0308-5147},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/free-software-production-as-critical-social/docview/1512220562/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.1080/03085147.2013.791510},
|
||
abstract = {This paper analyses the phenomenon of free and open source software (FOSS) in the light of Luc Boltanski and Eve Chiapello's The new spirit of capitalism. It argues that collaborative FOSS production by volunteer software developers is a species of critical social practice in Boltanski and Chiapello's sense: rooted in resistance to capitalist social relations, and yet also a source of values that justify the new routes to profitability associated with contemporary network capitalism. Advanced via collective projects that are sustained by hacker norms and privately legislated 'copyleft' law, the FOSS ethos is apparently antithetical to private property-based accumulation. Yet it can be shown to embody the 'new spirit of capitalism' in its most distilled form; moreover FOSS developers have instituted new forms of property and new modes of profit creation around software that are in the process of being adapted for use in other economic sectors. Meanwhile, the private law constraints on profit-seeking that have emerged from the FOSS movement are counteracting some of the social pathologies that accompany network capitalism only to consolidate others. The paper concludes by identifying likely bases for a renewal of critique given these realities. Adapted from the source document.},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {4},
|
||
journal = {Economy and Society},
|
||
author = {Barron, Anne},
|
||
month = nov,
|
||
year = {2013},
|
||
note = {Publisher: Routledge/Taylor \& Francis, Abingdon UK},
|
||
keywords = {Law, Volunteers, Social Networks, Cooperation, article, Computer Software, Capitalism, social change \& economic development, Profits, Values, 0715:social change and economic development, Economic Sectors},
|
||
pages = {597--625},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - ECSCAK},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2014-04-01},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Capitalism; Computer Software; Profits; Law; Social Networks; Volunteers; Values; Economic Sectors; Cooperation},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{conaldi_dual_2013,
|
||
title = {The dual network structure of organizational problem solving: {A} case study on open source software development},
|
||
volume = {35},
|
||
issn = {0378-8733, 0378-8733},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/dual-network-structure-organizational-problem/docview/1429630051/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
abstract = {We reconstruct the dual network structure generated by the association between 72 contributors and 737 software bugs engaged during a full development cycle of the free/open source software project Epiphany. Estimates of structural parameters of Exponential Random Graph Models for two-mode networks reveal the structural logics shaping activities of collaborative problem solving. After controlling for contributor-specific and software bug-specific characteristics, we find that contributors ('problem solvers') tend to distribute their activity over multiple software bugs. At the same time, however, we find that software bugs ('problems') tend not to share multiple contributors. This dual tendency toward de-specialization and exclusivity is sustained by specific local network dependencies revealed by our analysis which also suggests possible organizational mechanisms that may be underlying the puzzling macro-structural regularities frequently observed, but rarely explained, in the production of open source software. By combining these mechanisms with the influence of contributors characterized by different levels of involvement in the project, we provide micro-level evidence of structural interdependence between 'core' and 'peripheral' members identified exclusively on the basis of their individual level of contribution to the project. [Copyright Elsevier B.V.]},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {2},
|
||
journal = {Social Networks},
|
||
author = {Conaldi, Guido and Lomi, Alessandro},
|
||
month = may,
|
||
year = {2013},
|
||
note = {Publisher: Elsevier, Amsterdam The Netherlands},
|
||
keywords = {social network analysis, Organizational Structure, Cooperation, article, Property, Computer Software, 0665:complex organization, Two-mode networks Exponential Random Graphs Free/open source software Organizational problem solving},
|
||
pages = {237--250},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - SONED4},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2013-09-01},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Computer Software; Property; Organizational Structure; Cooperation},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{ross_place_2013,
|
||
title = {The {Place} of {Free} and {Open} {Source} {Software} in the {Social} {Apparatus} of {Accumulation}},
|
||
volume = {77},
|
||
issn = {0036-8237, 0036-8237},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/place-free-open-source-software-social-apparatus/docview/1364703302/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
abstract = {The immateriality of both commodities and labor, which is increasingly characteristic of contemporary capitalism at its hi-tech centers, has complicated drawing a hard distinction between productive and unproductive forms of labor. Drawing an overly technical distinction between these two categories of labor potentially overlooks some important aspects of the processes of capitalist reproduction, particularly the increasingly social character of labor, and as such, a broader definition must be considered. The labor engaged in the production of Free and Open Source Software (FOSS) is illustrative of this need for further examination of the productive-unproductive distinction, for the fact that though FOSS, in some respects, appears tendentially anti-capitalist, in fact, it, and the immaterial labor driving it, has essentially been fully subsumed in the apparatus of capital accumulation. Adapted from the source document.},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {2},
|
||
journal = {Science \& Society},
|
||
author = {Ross, Daniel},
|
||
month = apr,
|
||
year = {2013},
|
||
note = {Publisher: Guilford Press, New York NY},
|
||
keywords = {article, Property, 1734:sociology of science, Automobiles, Commodities, sociology of science},
|
||
pages = {202--226},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - SSOCBT},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2014-02-21},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {Number of references - 12},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Property; Automobiles; Commodities},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{bixler_toward_2012,
|
||
title = {Toward a {Community} of {Innovation} in {Community}-{Based} {Natural} {Resource} {Management}: {Insights} from {Open} {Source} {Software}},
|
||
volume = {71},
|
||
issn = {0018-7259, 0018-7259},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/toward-community-innovation-based-natural/docview/1283642756/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
abstract = {Community-based natural resource management (CBNRM) is an environmental governance approach that deals with complex and interwoven ecological problems through a participatory environmental management framework. Practitioner, donor, and academic interest in this strategy is on the rise, and successful CBNRM organizations are experiencing internal and external pressures to help "transfer" their knowledge and experiences to other contexts and scales. If organized through the traditional top-down diffusion of innovation approach, many barriers to CBNRM transfer exist, beginning with organizational costs that may outweigh potential benefits. However, reframed as a more "open" and emergent process, the burdens of transfer may be reduced and benefits increased. We draw on an analogy from the Open Source Software (OSS) movement to suggest an organizational rationale for exchange and principles such as "porting," the "kernel," "copyleft," and "forking" that can guide CBNRM and for community-based organizations challenged to share their approach to conservation. Adapted from the source document.},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {3},
|
||
journal = {Human Organization},
|
||
author = {Bixler, R Patrick and Taylor, Peter Leigh},
|
||
month = oct,
|
||
year = {2012},
|
||
note = {Publisher: Society for Applied Anthropology, Oklahoma City OK},
|
||
keywords = {Knowledge, Governance, Innovations, article, Property, 2656:environmental interactions, Community Organizations, community-based natural resource management watershed management transferability open source software, Environmental Factors, environmental interactions, Information Dissemination, Natural Resources, Resource Management},
|
||
pages = {234--243},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - HUORAY},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2013-02-01},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Resource Management; Natural Resources; Property; Innovations; Governance; Knowledge; Environmental Factors; Community Organizations; Information Dissemination},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{bixler_toward_2012-1,
|
||
title = {Toward a {Community} of {Innovation} in {Community}-{Based} {Natural} {Resource} {Management}: {Insights} from {Open} {Source} {Software}},
|
||
volume = {71},
|
||
issn = {00187259},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/toward-community-innovation-based-natural/docview/1055806751/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.17730/humo.71.3.200w0j1266306t79},
|
||
abstract = {Community-based natural resource management (CBNRM) is an environmental governance approach that deals with complex and interwoven ecological problems through a participatory environmental management framework. Practitioner, donor, and academic interest in this strategy is on the rise, and successful CBNRM organizations are experiencing internal and external pressures to help "transfer" their knowledge and experiences to other contexts and scales. If organized through the traditional top-down diffusion of innovation approach, many barriers to CBNRM transfer exist, beginning with organizational costs that may outweigh potential benefits. However, reframed as a more "open" and emergent process, the burdens of transfer may be reduced and benefits increased. We draw on an analogy from the Open Source Software (OSS) movement to suggest an organizational rationale for exchange and principles such as "porting," the "kernel," "copyleft," and "forking" that can guide CBNRM and for community-based organizations challenged to share their approach to conservation. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {3},
|
||
journal = {Human Organization},
|
||
author = {Bixler, R Patrick and Taylor, Peter Leigh},
|
||
year = {2012},
|
||
note = {Place: Oklahoma City
|
||
Publisher: Taylor \& Francis Ltd.},
|
||
keywords = {Open source software, Community, Research methodology, Studies, Information dissemination, Collaboration, Open source, Software, Open-source software, Resource management, Research, Diffusion, Success, Governance, Public domain, Sciences: Comprehensive Works, Innovations, United States--US, Property, Startups, Principles, Community engagement, Colorado, Community organizations, Conservation, Environmental aspects, Environmental governance, Environmental resource management, Montana, Natural resource, Natural resource management, Taylor, Peter, Watershed management, Watersheds},
|
||
pages = {234--243},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - HUORAY},
|
||
annote = {Copyright - Copyright Society of Applied Anthropology Fall 2012},
|
||
annote = {Document feature - References; Maps},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2024-12-06},
|
||
annote = {Name - Colorado State University},
|
||
annote = {People - Taylor, Peter},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Montana; United States--US; Taylor, Peter; Colorado},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{alexandrowicz_ganz_2012,
|
||
title = {"{GANZ} {RASCH}": {A} {Free} {Software} for {Categorical} {Data} {Analysis}},
|
||
volume = {30},
|
||
issn = {0894-4393, 0894-4393},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/ganz-rasch-free-software-categorical-data/docview/1125224290/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.1177/0894439311417222},
|
||
abstract = {This article presents a new and freely available tool for performing analyses according to the Rasch model (RM) and the latent class analysis (LCA). The software allows for the estimation of the model parameters and offers several measures of model fit. A graphical user interface (GUI) provides access to numerous options regarding data, models, and output. For educational purposes, an optional annotate feature allows to augment the output with brief explanations and citations regarding the procedures. Based on published data, the features of GANZ RASCH are briefly illustrated in two worked examples. The program intends to combine ease of use while allowing for performing a full-fledged analysis, thus targeting a wide range of users. [Reprinted by permission of Sage Publications Inc., copyright holder.]},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {3},
|
||
journal = {Social Science Computer Review},
|
||
author = {Alexandrowicz, Rainer W},
|
||
month = aug,
|
||
year = {2012},
|
||
note = {Publisher: Sage Publications, Thousand Oaks CA},
|
||
keywords = {article, Computer Software, 0188:methodology and research technology, Categorical Data, computer methods, media, \& applications, Latent Structure Analysis, Rasch model latent class analysis parameter estimation assessment of model fit},
|
||
pages = {369--379},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - SSCREH},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2012-11-01},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Computer Software; Latent Structure Analysis; Categorical Data},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{schoonmaker_hacking_2012,
|
||
title = {{HACKING} {THE} {GLOBAL}: {Constructing} markets and commons through free software},
|
||
volume = {15},
|
||
issn = {1369118X},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/hacking-global-constructing-markets-commons/docview/1010041729/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.1080/1369118X.2012.665938},
|
||
abstract = {This paper explores software's pivotal role in the power dynamics of contemporary capitalism. The author theorizes Free Software as a new form of property that is infecting capitalism like a virus, challenging the system of private property central to its dominant logic. Free Software can be produced by developers working for free in peer communities or in profit-oriented firms. The author explores the conditions under which Free Software is produced through peer versus market-based production, emphasizing the implications for constructing the Free Software market and the digital commons. The author identifies actors' motivations, the organizational structure of production, and financial resources as three factors shaping these conditions. The author focuses on the case of Ubuntu, a Free Software operating system that is available free of charge on the Internet. Ubuntu is produced by Canonical, a Free Software, market-based firm, through an intriguing combination of market-based and peer production that both embodies and transforms capitalist practices. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {4},
|
||
journal = {Information, Communication \& Society},
|
||
author = {Schoonmaker, Sara},
|
||
year = {2012},
|
||
note = {Place: Abingdon
|
||
Publisher: Taylor \& Francis Ltd.},
|
||
keywords = {Information technology, Software, Ubuntu, Computers--Information Science And Information Theory, Peer production, Free software, Internet, Social networks, Organizational structure, Hacking},
|
||
pages = {502},
|
||
annote = {Copyright - Copyright Taylor \& Francis Ltd. 2012},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2023-11-25},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{thakur_limited_2012,
|
||
title = {A limited revolution - {The} distributional consequences of {Open} {Source} {Software} in {North} {America}},
|
||
volume = {79},
|
||
issn = {00401625},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/limited-revolution-distributional-consequences/docview/918396972/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.1016/j.techfore.2011.10.003},
|
||
abstract = {Open Source Software (OSS) has become an important alternative method of organizing the production of software and has gained in popularity and use because of its benefits and costs relative to the dominant proprietary software model. In this paper, I use evidence from the United States and Canada to examine the distribution of these benefits and costs. I argue that although the rhetoric surrounding OSS is supported empirically, the benefits of OSS have been limited because of the way this technological project has evolved within its associated policy environment. That is, although ostensibly neutral, the policies and laws of both the U.S. and Canadian governments have tended to be positioned implicitly against the use of OSS both in the public sector and in the economy generally. In addition, OSS use and development requires a set of skills that are absent in many instances or create prohibitively high costs. Thus OSS is typically used by larger organizations, and its development is restricted to a mostly male, highly educated, high-income group of contributors. Therefore while the benefits of OSS are real, the distribution of these benefits is skewed. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {2},
|
||
journal = {Technological Forecasting and Social Change},
|
||
author = {Thakur, Dhanaraj},
|
||
month = feb,
|
||
year = {2012},
|
||
note = {Place: New York
|
||
Publisher: Elsevier Science Ltd.},
|
||
keywords = {Open source software, Sociology, Studies, Canada, Open source, Open-source software, Software development, Statistical analysis, 5240:Software \& systems, 9130:Experiment/theoretical treatment, Public domain, United States--US, Public sector, 9190:United States, 1120:Economic policy \& planning, 9172:Canada, Skills, Cost benefit analysis, Economic policy},
|
||
pages = {244},
|
||
annote = {Copyright - Copyright Elsevier Science Ltd. Feb 2012},
|
||
annote = {Document feature - Tables},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2024-12-06},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Canada; United States--US},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{lee_how_2012,
|
||
title = {How to {Think} about {Intellectual} {Property} of {Open} {Source} {Software} from a {Feminist} {Political} {Economic} {Perspective}?},
|
||
volume = {6},
|
||
issn = {1832-3669, 1832-3669},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/how-think-about-intellectual-property-open-source/docview/1494749355/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
abstract = {This paper asserts that a feminist political economic perspective enriches the understanding of how intellectual property of software is related to an equitable information society. This approach is used to examine how F/OSS may contribute to a people-centred and development-oriented information society. Three questions are asked: (1) Is it helpful to view F/OSS as market or non-market production? (2) How is F/OSS distributed and marketed? (3) How does F/OSS rely on gendered labour? By analysing existing writings on F/OSS, it is concluded that market production should not be privileged over other modes of production; state intervention is required to ensure an equitable distribution of F/OSS; and gendered labour needs to be made visible in the F/OSS production. Adapted from the source document.},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
journal = {International Journal of Technology, Knowledge and Society},
|
||
author = {Lee, Micky},
|
||
year = {2012},
|
||
note = {Publisher: www.cg.publisher.com},
|
||
keywords = {Feminism, Markets, article, Property, Computer Software, Information Society, 1772: sociology of science, sociology of technology, Intellectual Property, Open Source Software, Feminist Political Economy, Modes of Production, Political Economy, State Intervention},
|
||
pages = {107--120},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2014-02-01},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Modes of Production; Property; Markets; Political Economy; Information Society; Feminism; Computer Software; State Intervention},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{thakur_limited_2012-1,
|
||
title = {A limited revolution -- {The} distributional consequences of {Open} {Source} {Software} in {North} {America}},
|
||
volume = {79},
|
||
issn = {0040-1625, 0040-1625},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/limited-revolution-distributional-consequences/docview/1018359239/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.1016/j.techfore.2011.10.003},
|
||
abstract = {Open Source Software (OSS) has become an important alternative method of organizing the production of software and has gained in popularity and use because of its benefits and costs relative to the dominant proprietary software model. In this paper, I use evidence from the United States and Canada to examine the distribution of these benefits and costs. I argue that although the rhetoric surrounding OSS is supported empirically, the benefits of OSS have been limited because of the way this technological project has evolved within its associated policy environment. That is, although ostensibly neutral, the policies and laws of both the U.S. and Canadian governments have tended to be positioned implicitly against the use of OSS both in the public sector and in the economy generally. In addition, OSS use and development requires a set of skills that are absent in many instances or create prohibitively high costs. Thus OSS is typically used by larger organizations, and its development is restricted to a mostly male, highly educated, high-income group of contributors. Therefore while the benefits of OSS are real, the distribution of these benefits is skewed. [Copyright Elsevier Inc.]},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {2},
|
||
journal = {Technological Forecasting and Social Change},
|
||
author = {Thakur, Dhanaraj},
|
||
year = {2012},
|
||
note = {Publisher: Elsevier Science Publishing, Amsterdam The Netherlands},
|
||
keywords = {Canada, Rhetoric, Public Sector, article, Property, Computer Software, sociology of technology, 1772:sociology of science, North America, Skills, Alternative Approaches, Males, Open source software Distributional consequences United States Canada Intellectual property},
|
||
pages = {244--251},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - TFSCB3},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2012-06-01},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Computer Software; Property; North America; Public Sector; Alternative Approaches; Males; Canada; Rhetoric; Skills},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{blakely_oss_2011,
|
||
title = {Oss {Tales}},
|
||
volume = {113},
|
||
issn = {0002-7294, 0002-7294},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/oss-tales/docview/1010633099/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {4},
|
||
journal = {American Anthropologist},
|
||
author = {Blakely, Pamela A R and Blakely, Pamela A R},
|
||
month = dec,
|
||
year = {2011},
|
||
note = {Publisher: American Anthropological Association, Arlington VA},
|
||
keywords = {article, 0513: culture and social structure, culture (kinship, forms of social organization, social cohesion \& integration, \& social representations)},
|
||
pages = {657--658},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - AMATA7},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2012-05-01},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {SuppNotes - Edition date: 2007.},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{garzarelli_open_2011,
|
||
title = {Open {Source} {Software} {Production}, {Spontaneous} {Input}, and {Organizational} {Learning}},
|
||
volume = {70},
|
||
issn = {00029246},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/open-source-software-production-spontaneous-input/docview/900194620/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.1111/j.1536-7150.2011.00798.x},
|
||
abstract = {This work shows that the modular organization of voluntary open source software (OSS) production, whereby programmers supply effort of their accord, capitalizes more on division than on specialization of labor. This is so because voluntary OSS production is characterized by an organizational learning process that dominates the individual one. Organizational learning reveals production choices that would otherwise remain unknown, thereby increasing productivity and indirectly reinforcing incentives to undertake collective problem solving. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {4},
|
||
journal = {The American Journal of Economics and Sociology},
|
||
author = {Garzarelli, Giampaolo and Fontanella, Riccardo},
|
||
month = oct,
|
||
year = {2011},
|
||
note = {Place: New York
|
||
Publisher: Blackwell Publishing Ltd.},
|
||
keywords = {Open source software, Studies, Productivity, Business And Economics, Open source, Software, Open-source software, 9130:Experiment/theoretical treatment, Public domain, 2500:Organizational behavior, 8302:Software \& computer services industry, 1130:Economic theory, Programmer, Organizational learning, Production, Production functions},
|
||
pages = {928},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - AJESA3},
|
||
annote = {Copyright - Copyright Blackwell Publishing Ltd. Oct 2011},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2024-12-06},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{garzarelli_open_2011-1,
|
||
title = {Open {Source} {Software} {Production}, {Spontaneous} {Input}, and {Organizational} {Learning}},
|
||
volume = {70},
|
||
issn = {0002-9246, 0002-9246},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/open-source-software-production-spontaneous-input/docview/1037877900/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.1111/j.1536-7150.2011.00798.x},
|
||
abstract = {This work shows that the modular organization of voluntary open source software (OSS) production, whereby programmers supply effort of their accord, capitalizes more on division than on specialization of labor. This is so because voluntary OSS production is characterized by an organizational learning process that dominates the individual one. Organizational learning reveals production choices that would otherwise remain unknown, thereby increasing productivity and indirectly reinforcing incentives to undertake collective problem solving. Adapted from the source document.},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {4},
|
||
journal = {The American Journal of Economics and Sociology},
|
||
author = {Garzarelli, Giampaolo and Fontanella, Riccardo},
|
||
month = oct,
|
||
year = {2011},
|
||
note = {Publisher: Blackwell Publishers, Malden MA},
|
||
keywords = {Productivity, article, Property, sociology of technology, 1772:sociology of science, Choices, Specialization, Collectives, Organizational Development},
|
||
pages = {928--950},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - AJESA3},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2012-09-01},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Organizational Development; Property; Specialization; Productivity; Collectives; Choices},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{norskov_observation_2011,
|
||
title = {Observation of {Online} {Communities}: {A} {Discussion} of {Online} and {Offline} {Observer} {Roles} in {Studying} {Development}, {Cooperation} and {Coordination} in an {Open} {Source} {Software} {Environment}},
|
||
volume = {12},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/observation-online-communities-discussion-offline/docview/898516662/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
abstract = {Abstract This paper addresses the application of observation to online settings with a special focus on observer roles. It draws on a study of online observation of a virtual community, i.e. an open source software (OSS) community. The paper examines general and specific advantages and disadvantages of the observer roles in online settings by relating these roles to the same roles assumed in offline settings. The study suggests that under the right circumstances online and offline observation may benefit from being combined as they complement each other well. Quality issues and factors important to elicit trustworthy observational data from online study settings, such as OSS communities, are discussed. A proposition is made concerning how threats to credibility and transferability in relation to online observation (i.e. lack of richness and detail, risk of misunderstandings) can be diminished, while maintaining the level of dependability (which is potentially high due to a greater degree of anonymity and "isolation" in online settings). The paper thus suggests that the less participative the researcher's online observer role is, the more s/he should consider introducing offline data collection techniques rather than adopting a more participative role in the observed online setting. This methodological discussion forms the basis for making a well-considered choice of online observer role rather than passively sliding into a role assigned by the setting. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {3},
|
||
journal = {Forum : Qualitative Social Research},
|
||
author = {Nørskov, Sladjana V and Rask, Morten},
|
||
year = {2011},
|
||
note = {Place: Berlin
|
||
Publisher: Freie Universität Berlin},
|
||
keywords = {Open source software, Qualitative research, Research methodology, Social research, Open source, Online community, Open-source software, Virtual community, Social networks, Social Sciences: Comprehensive Works},
|
||
annote = {Copyright - Copyright Freie Universität Berlin 2011},
|
||
annote = {Document feature - References},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2024-08-27},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{alleyne_challenging_2011,
|
||
title = {Challenging {Code}: {A} {Sociological} {Reading} of the {KDE} {Free} {Software} {Project}},
|
||
volume = {45},
|
||
issn = {0038-0385, 0038-0385},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/challenging-code-sociological-reading-kde-free/docview/902078949/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.1177/0038038511399620},
|
||
abstract = {Free, Libre and Open Source Software (FLOSS) challenges the norms and relations of the capitalist software industry that is at the core of network society. Many people involved in FLOSS see themselves as activists in a new social movement. The article discusses the KDE (Kool Desktop Environment) project as a FLOSS case study. KDE is one of several projects intended to bring ease of use of a graphical user interface (GUI) to various free operating systems. (The operating system is the underlying software on top of which sit applications we use directly such as web browsers or word processors.) The article considers the KDE project from three broad perspectives -- 'cosmological', technical, and organizational -- in order to examine the expressed world-view and technical organization of the project through an established sociological approach to activism and social movements. [Reprinted by permission of Sage Publications Ltd., copyright BSA Publications Ltd.]},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {3},
|
||
journal = {Sociology},
|
||
author = {Alleyne, Brian},
|
||
month = jun,
|
||
year = {2011},
|
||
note = {Publisher: Sage Publications, London UK},
|
||
keywords = {Social Movements, social movements, Activism, article, Property, Computer Software, sociology of technology, 1772:sociology of science, 0826:mass phenomena, activism computer programming free software hackers KDE Linux},
|
||
pages = {496--511},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - SLGYA5},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2011-11-02},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {Number of references - 63},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Computer Software; Social Movements; Activism; Property},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{alleyne_challenging_2011-1,
|
||
title = {Challenging {Code}: {A} {Sociological} {Reading} of the {KDE} {Free} {Software} {Project}},
|
||
volume = {45},
|
||
issn = {00380385},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/challenging-code-sociological-reading-kde-free/docview/1928264389/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.1177/0038038511399620},
|
||
abstract = {Free, Libre and Open Source Software (FLOSS) challenges the norms and relations of the capitalist software industry that is at the core of network society. Many people involved in FLOSS see themselves as activists in a new social movement. The article discusses the KDE (Kool Desktop Environment) project as a FLOSS case study. KDE is one of several projects intended to bring ease of use of a graphical user interface (GUI) to various free operating systems. (The operating system is the underlying software on top of which sit applications we use directly such as web browsers or word processors.) The article considers the KDE project from three broad perspectives -- 'cosmological', technical, and organizational -- in order to examine the expressed world-view and technical organization of the project through an established sociological approach to activism and social movements.},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {3},
|
||
journal = {Sociology : the Journal of the British Sociological Association},
|
||
author = {Alleyne, Brian},
|
||
month = jun,
|
||
year = {2011},
|
||
note = {Place: London
|
||
Publisher: Sage Publications Ltd.},
|
||
keywords = {Open source software, Sociology, activism, Social movements, Activism, free software, hackers, Software, Linux, Operating systems, Case studies, Free software, 51321:Software Publishers, Software industry, Software project management, Property, Floss, Social movement, computer programming, KDE, Protest movements, Word processors},
|
||
pages = {496--511},
|
||
annote = {Copyright - © The Author(s) 2011},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2024-11-26},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{carlotto_activist-driven_2011,
|
||
title = {Activist-driven innovation: an interpretive history of free software},
|
||
volume = {26},
|
||
issn = {01026909},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/activist-driven-innovation-interpretive-history/docview/1732127821/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.1590/S0102-69092011000200005},
|
||
abstract = {The understanding that there are two distinct regimes for the production of software is increasingly common in literature. What is not so common, and is therefore the most original contribution of this paper is, on the one hand, the historical approach to the configuration of those regimes and, on the other hand, the analysis of the factors determining the technical and commercial success of one regime over the other. Furthermore, we have worked with two additional hypotheses: first, that the development of free software historically belongs to the public/scientific knowledge production regime - i.e., free software mimicking the organization of the scientific community because it has its historical roots in it; and secondly, that in a "market competition" environment the public and scientific regime has proven more efficient and has therefore forced companies working in the private/business regime to adopt free or open source software.},
|
||
language = {Portuguese},
|
||
number = {76},
|
||
journal = {Revista Brasileira de Ciências Sociais},
|
||
author = {Carlotto, Maria Caramez and Ortellado, Pablo},
|
||
year = {2011},
|
||
note = {Place: Sao Paulo
|
||
Publisher: Associação Nacional de Pós-Graduação e Pesquisa em Ciências Sociais - ANPOCS},
|
||
keywords = {Innovation, Intellectual property, Free software, Social Sciences: Comprehensive Works, Inovação, Knowledge production regimes, Logiciel libre, Propriedade intelectual, Propriété intéllectuelle, Regimes de produção de conhecimento, Régimes de production du savoir, Software livre},
|
||
pages = {77--102},
|
||
annote = {Copyright - Copyright Associação Nacional de Pós-Graduação e Pesquisa em Ciências Sociais - ANPOCS 2011},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2023-06-14},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{norskov_observation_2011-1,
|
||
title = {Observation of {Online} {Communities}: {A} {Discussion} of {Online} and {Offline} {Observer} {Roles} in {Studying} {Development}, {Cooperation} and {Coordination} in an {Open} {Source} {Software} {Environment}},
|
||
volume = {12},
|
||
issn = {1438-5627, 1438-5627},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/observation-online-communities-discussion-offline/docview/1037882375/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
abstract = {This paper addresses the application of observation to online settings with a special focus on observer roles. It draws on a study of online observation of a virtual community, i.e. an open source software (OSS) community. The paper examines general and specific advantages and disadvantages of the observer roles in online settings by relating these roles to the same roles assumed in offline settings. The study suggests that under the right circumstances online and offline observation may benefit from being combined as they complement each other well. Quality issues and factors important to elicit trustworthy observational data from online study settings, such as OSS communities, are discussed. A proposition is made concerning how threats to credibility and transferability in relation to online observation (i.e. lack of richness and detail, risk of misunderstandings) can be diminished, while maintaining the level of dependability (which is potentially high due to a greater degree of anonymity and 'isolation' in online settings). The paper thus suggests that the less participative the researcher's online observer role is, the more s/he should consider introducing offline data collection techniques rather than adopting a more participative role in the observed online setting. This methodological discussion forms the basis for making a well-considered choice of online observer role rather than passively sliding into a role assigned by the setting. Adapted from the source document.},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {3},
|
||
journal = {Forum Qualitative Sozialforschung/Forum: Qualitative Social Research},
|
||
author = {Norskov, Sladjana V and Rask, Morten},
|
||
year = {2011},
|
||
note = {Publisher: Free University of Berlin, Germany},
|
||
keywords = {Risk, mailing lists, online data, Threat, Cooperation, Internet, Reliability, Virtual Reality, article, Property, 0104:methodology and research technology, Choices, Methodology (Data Collection), observation, observer roles, open source software communities, research methods/tools},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2012-09-01},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Internet; Property; Methodology (Data Collection); Threat; Reliability; Cooperation; Choices; Risk; Virtual Reality},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{carlotto_activist-driven_2011-1,
|
||
title = {Activist-driven innovation: an interpretive history of free software},
|
||
volume = {26},
|
||
issn = {0102-6909, 0102-6909},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/activist-driven-innovation-interpretive-history/docview/1037876933/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.1590/S0102-69092011000200005},
|
||
abstract = {The understanding that there are two distinct regimes for the production of software is increasingly common in literature. What is not so common, and is therefore the most original contribution of this paper is, on the one hand, the historical approach to the configuration of those regimes and, on the other hand, the analysis of the factors determining the technical and commercial success of one regime over the other. Furthermore, we have worked with two additional hypotheses: first, that the development of free software historically belongs to the public/scientific knowledge production regime -- i.e., free software mimicking the organization of the scientific community because it has its historical roots in it; and secondly, that in a 'market competition' environment the public and scientific regime has proven more efficient and has therefore forced companies working in the private/business regime to adopt free or open source software. Adapted from the source document.},
|
||
language = {Portuguese},
|
||
number = {76},
|
||
journal = {Revista Brasileira de Ciencias Sociais},
|
||
author = {Carlotto, Maria Caramez and Ortellado, Pablo},
|
||
year = {2011},
|
||
note = {Publisher: ANPOCS, Sao Paulo Brazil},
|
||
keywords = {Innovation, Intellectual property, Free software, Markets, Innovations, article, Property, Computer Software, 1772: sociology of science, sociology of technology, Economic Development, Knowledge production regimes, Scientific Community, Scientific Knowledge},
|
||
pages = {77--102},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - RBCSEQ},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2012-09-01},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Computer Software; Innovations; Markets; Economic Development; Property; Scientific Knowledge; Scientific Community},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{thomas_participation_2010,
|
||
title = {Participation in the {Knowledge} {Society}: the {Free} and {Open} {Source} {Software} ({FOSS}) movement compared with participatory development},
|
||
volume = {20},
|
||
issn = {0961-4524, 0961-4524},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/participation-knowledge-society-free-open-source/docview/60355830/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.1080/09614520903566509},
|
||
abstract = {The possibilities and limits of participation at the 'bottom' (represented, for example, by PRA and PLA) have been well articulated in development literature. However, the emergence of the Knowledge Society has opened up spaces for what we could call participation at the 'top' (free software, wiki, open access), the implications of which Development Studies is only beginning to grapple with. Building upon recent debates on the issue, we take the cases of the free software movement and participatory development, arguing that they share common ground in several ways. We aim to offer a few pointers on conceptualising development in the Knowledge Society. Adapted from the source document.},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {2},
|
||
journal = {Development in Practice},
|
||
author = {Thomas, Bejoy K},
|
||
month = apr,
|
||
year = {2010},
|
||
note = {Publisher: Carfax/Taylor \& Francis, Abingdon UK},
|
||
keywords = {Participation, Knowledge, article, Property, Computer Software, sociology of technology, 1772:sociology of science},
|
||
pages = {270--276},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - DEPRFO},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2010-10-21},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {Number of references - 16},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Participation; Knowledge; Computer Software; Property},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{lee_how_2010,
|
||
title = {How to {Think} about {Intellectual} {Property} of {Open} {Source} {Software} from a {Feminist} {Political} {Economic} {Perspective}?},
|
||
volume = {6},
|
||
issn = {1832-3669, 1832-3669},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/how-think-about-intellectual-property-open-source/docview/754043369/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
abstract = {This paper asserts that a feminist political economic perspective enriches the understanding of how intellectual property of software is related to an equitable information society. This approach is used to examine how F/OSS may contribute to a people-centred and development-oriented information society. Three questions are asked: (1) Is it helpful to view F/OSS as market or non-market production? (2) How is F/OSS distributed and marketed? (3) How does F/OSS rely on gendered labour? By analysing existing writings on F/OSS, it is concluded that market production should not be privileged over other modes of production; state intervention is required to ensure an equitable distribution of F/OSS; and gendered labour needs to be made visible in the F/OSS production. Adapted from the source document.},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
journal = {International Journal of Technology, Knowledge and Society},
|
||
author = {Lee, Micky},
|
||
year = {2010},
|
||
note = {Publisher: www.cg.publisher.com},
|
||
keywords = {Feminism, Markets, article, Property, Computer Software, Information Society, 1772: sociology of science, sociology of technology, Intellectual Property, Open Source Software, Feminist Political Economy, Modes of Production, Political Economy, State Intervention},
|
||
pages = {107--120},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2010-09-10},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Modes of Production; Property; Markets; Political Economy; Information Society; Feminism; Computer Software; State Intervention},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{tania_perez_bustos_insights_2010,
|
||
title = {Insights on a {Feminist} {Ethnography} of the {Free} {Software} {Community} in {Colombia}},
|
||
volume = {18},
|
||
issn = {0104-026X},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/insights-on-feminist-ethnography-free-software/docview/1957381891/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.1590/S0104-026X2010000200006},
|
||
abstract = {The article presents the ethnographic insights of a woman researcher that investigates the role of a group of women inside the Free Software community in Colombia. Particularly the article questions how the ethnographic practice, from a feminist perspective, contributes to the (re)construction of gender as an analytical category on the social realities it studies.},
|
||
language = {Portuguese},
|
||
number = {2},
|
||
journal = {Estudos Feministas},
|
||
author = {{Tania Pérez Bustos}},
|
||
year = {2010},
|
||
note = {Place: Florianopolis
|
||
Publisher: Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, CFH/CCE - Revista Estudos Feministas},
|
||
keywords = {Females, Studies, Women, Ethnography, Software, Feminism, Colombia, Comunidad del Software Libre, Conocimiento situado, Etnografía feminista, Gender roles, GenderWatch, Subjetividad feminista, Tecnología de género, Womens studies, Y},
|
||
pages = {385},
|
||
annote = {Copyright - Copyright Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, CFH/CCE - Revista Estudos Feministas 2010},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2024-04-09},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Colombia},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{perez-bustos_building_2010,
|
||
title = {Building {Spaces} of {Exclusivity}: {An} {Ethnographic} {Approach} to {Indian} and {Colombian} {Women}'s {Role} and {Experience} in {Local} {Free} {Software} {Communities}},
|
||
issn = {0120-4807, 0120-4807},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/building-spaces-exclusivity-ethnographic-approach/docview/1364699164/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
abstract = {This paper aims to account for the ways women integrating the free software community in two countries from the global South negotiate with feminizing paradigms imposed to them by the collectives interested in popularizating free technologies. Through an ethnographic approach to vital experiences of women in the Indian collective Linux-Chix, and holding a dialog with the experiences of non-organized women in the free software community in Colombia, this paper suggests these negotiations are going to be materialized primarily in the constitution of survival strategies from which certain civilizing projects are particularly vindicated, some of which seem to promote a Western paradigm of female subjectivity. Adapted from the source document.},
|
||
language = {Spanish},
|
||
number = {69},
|
||
journal = {Universitas Humanistica},
|
||
author = {Perez-Bustos, Tania},
|
||
month = jan,
|
||
year = {2010},
|
||
note = {Publisher: Facultad de Ciencias Sociales, Pontificia Universidad Javeriana, Bogota Colombia},
|
||
keywords = {Females, India, Ethnography, article, Computer Software, Colombia, 0410: group interactions, 2983: feminist/gender studies, Free Software, women, feminism, social group identity \& intergroup relations (groups based on race \& ethnicity, age, \& sexual orientation), sociology of gender \& gender relations, Subjectivity},
|
||
pages = {115--137},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2013-06-01},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Females; Computer Software; Ethnography; India; Subjectivity; Colombia},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{morner_note_2009,
|
||
title = {A {Note} on {Knowledge} {Creation} in {Open}-{Source} {Software} {Projects}: {What} {Can} {We} {Learn} from {Luhmann}'s {Theory} of {Social} {Systems}?},
|
||
volume = {22},
|
||
issn = {1094-429X, 1094-429X},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/note-on-knowledge-creation-open-source-software/docview/60307129/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.1007/s11213-009-9139-7},
|
||
abstract = {We use the sociological systems theory proposed by Niklas Luhmann to complement a socially-oriented view of knowledge with the role of technical infrastructure in knowledge creation. We highlight the self-referential character of knowledge creation and draw upon illustrative examples from open-source software. We discuss why knowledge creation processes are often prone to breakdown and propose three conditions that may stabilize knowledge creation processes: perceptibility, systemic memory, and modularity. Adapted from the source document.},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {6},
|
||
journal = {Systemic Practice and Action Research},
|
||
author = {Morner, Michele and von Krogh, Georg},
|
||
month = dec,
|
||
year = {2009},
|
||
note = {Publisher: Springer, The Netherlands},
|
||
keywords = {Knowledge, article, Computer Software, sociology of technology, 1772:sociology of science, Memory, Luhmann, Niklas, Systems Theory},
|
||
pages = {431--443},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - SPARFL},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2010-10-21},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Knowledge; Computer Software; Luhmann, Niklas; Systems Theory; Memory},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{coleman_code_2009,
|
||
title = {{CODE} {IS} {SPEECH}: {Legal} {Tinkering}, {Expertise}, and {Protest} among {Free} and {Open} {Source} {Software} {Developers}},
|
||
volume = {24},
|
||
issn = {0886-7356, 0886-7356},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/code-is-speech-legal-tinkering-expertise-protest/docview/60307737/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.1111/j.1548-1360.2009.01036.x},
|
||
abstract = {In this essay, I examine the channels through which Free and Open Source Software (F/OSS) developers reconfigure central tenets of the liberal tradition -- and the meanings of both freedom and speech--to defend against efforts to constrain their productive autonomy. I demonstrate how F/OSS developers contest and specify the meaning of liberal freedom -- especially free speech -- through the development of legal tools and discourses within the context of the F/OSS project. I highlight how developers concurrently tinker with technology and the law using similar skills, which transform and consolidate ethical precepts among developers. I contrast this legal pedagogy with more extraordinary legal battles over intellectual property, speech, and software. I concentrate on the arrests of two programmers, Jon Johansen and Dmitry Sklyarov, and on the protests they provoked, which unfolded between 1999 and 2003. These events are analytically significant because they dramatized and thus made visible tacit social processes. They publicized the challenge that F/OSS represents to the dominant regime of intellectual property (and clarified the democratic stakes involved) and also stabilized a rival liberal legal regime intimately connecting source code to speech. Adapted from the source document.},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {3},
|
||
journal = {Cultural Anthropology},
|
||
author = {Coleman, Gabriella},
|
||
month = aug,
|
||
year = {2009},
|
||
note = {Publisher: American Anthropological Association, Arlington VA},
|
||
keywords = {Freedom, article, Computer Software, sociology of technology, 1772:sociology of science, Traditions, Arrests, Liberalism, Protest Movements},
|
||
pages = {420--454},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - CUANE3},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2010-01-05},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Computer Software; Liberalism; Traditions; Freedom; Arrests; Protest Movements},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{farmer_two_2009,
|
||
title = {Two {Bits}: {The} {Cultural} {Significance} of {Free} {Software}},
|
||
volume = {82},
|
||
issn = {00035491},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/two-bits-cultural-significance-free-software/docview/216491621/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.1353/anq.0.0063},
|
||
abstract = {[...] he explores future directions for the movement by looking at the cases of the Connexions project (a collaborative online repository of educational modules), and Creative Commons (an activist group which seeks to modify existing legal structures to allow for greater openness and creativity). Intellectual property law and its complex restrictions and incompatible foundations constitutes the "blind spot of open systems" (187).},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {2},
|
||
journal = {Anthropological Quarterly},
|
||
author = {Farmer, Erica A},
|
||
year = {2009},
|
||
note = {Place: Washington
|
||
Publisher: Institute for Ethnographic Research},
|
||
keywords = {Law, Community, Activism, Social research, Software, Anthropology, Intellectual property, Free software, Creativity, Internet, Legislation, Social networks, Culture, Technological change, Property, Free, Common lands, Cooperative learning, Creative Commons, Protestant Reformation},
|
||
pages = {617--620},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - ANQUAT},
|
||
annote = {Copyright - Copyright Institute for Ethnographic Research Spring 2009},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2023-11-19},
|
||
annote = {Name - Duke University Press; Wikipedia; Facebook Inc},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{leach_freedom_2009,
|
||
title = {Freedom {Imagined}: {Morality} and {Aesthetics} in {Open} {Source} {Software} {Design}},
|
||
volume = {74},
|
||
issn = {0014-1844, 0014-1844},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/freedom-imagined-morality-aesthetics-open-source/docview/61770588/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.1080/00141840902751188},
|
||
abstract = {This paper is about the interaction between the human imagination and technology among a self-described 'community': that of developers of Free or Open Source Software. I argue that the moral imagination observable in this phenomenon can be understood with reference to its emergence around specific methods of technical production. Principles of openness, truth, freedom and progress, which are also understood as central to the technical production of good software, are reinforced (as a ethical orientation) by their contribution to making 'good' software. A reciprocal dynamic ensues in which better software is seen as dependent on particular social practices and ideologies while these practices and ideologies are given salience by their success in fostering valuable production. Processes key to the generation of this social form are examined before a number of key features of the practice of programming, such as its often combative and individualistic character, and an absence of women in developer communities, are considered in the light of the analysis. Adapted from the source document.},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
journal = {Ethnos},
|
||
author = {Leach, James and Nafus, Dawn and Krieger, Bernhard},
|
||
month = mar,
|
||
year = {2009},
|
||
note = {Publisher: Routledge/Taylor \& Francis, Abingdon UK},
|
||
keywords = {Ethics, Technology, Imagination, article, Property, Computer Software, sociology of technology, 1772:sociology of science, Ideologies, Morality, Social Dynamics},
|
||
pages = {51--71},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - ETNOAE},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2010-10-21},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {Number of references - 51},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Computer Software; Ideologies; Property; Imagination; Ethics; Social Dynamics; Technology; Morality},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{mcinerney_technology_2009,
|
||
title = {Technology {Movements} and the {Politics} of {Free}/{Open} {Source} {Software}},
|
||
volume = {34},
|
||
issn = {0162-2439, 0162-2439},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/technology-movements-politics-free-open-source/docview/61706341/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.1177/0162243907309852},
|
||
abstract = {Many technologies in our everyday lives are expressions of deliberate and protracted political struggles among interested groups. While some technologies are inherently political, other technologies become politicized through competition among different groups and organizations. How do seemingly apolitical technologies become politicized? In this article, the author examines the case of the "circuit riders," a progressive technology movement in the United States that promotes information technology use among nonprofit and grassroots organizations, to show how a particular technology is politicized through field-level interactions. Applying and contributing to actor-network theory, the author finds that translation takes place as an organizational process by which actors associate the ideals of the technology in question with their political ideals and then attempt to enroll other actors to accept the resultant associations. Successful association depends on both discursive and organizational practices. [Reprinted by permission of Sage Publications Inc., copyright 2009.]},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {2},
|
||
journal = {Science, Technology, and Human Values},
|
||
author = {McInerney, Paul-Brian},
|
||
month = mar,
|
||
year = {2009},
|
||
note = {Publisher: Sage Publications, Thousand Oaks CA},
|
||
keywords = {Social Movements, Politics, Technology, Networks, article, Computer Software, sociology of technology, 1772:sociology of science, actor-network theory, free/open source software, politics, association, social movement},
|
||
pages = {206--233},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - STHVDQ},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2010-10-21},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {Number of references - 85},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Computer Software; Politics; Networks; Social Movements; Technology},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{schweik_reflections_2009,
|
||
title = {Reflections of an {Online} {Geographic} {Information} {Systems} {Course} {Based} on {Open} {Source} {Software}},
|
||
volume = {27},
|
||
issn = {0894-4393, 0894-4393},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/reflections-online-geographic-information-systems/docview/61710812/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.1177/0894439308320793},
|
||
abstract = {This article summarizes the experience of offering an online introductory course on geographic information systems (GIS) that utilizes available free/libre and open source software (FOSS). Two primary objectives are to (a) reach students in developing countries and (b) to help move forward the development of an open-content GIS curriculum as part of the Open Source Geospatial Foundation (OSGeo; OSGeo.org) educational effort. Course design, key software (QGIS, GRASS, PostgreSQL//PostGIS), and online delivery methods are described. Results and factors leading to a low course-completion rate are discussed. Contributing factors include (a) a for-credit versus no-credit decision and (b) technical issues. Recommendations for others considering online offerings and for the OSGeo educational effort are provided. [Reprinted by permission of Sage Publications Inc., copyright.]},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
journal = {Social Science Computer Review},
|
||
author = {Schweik, Charles M and Fernandez, Maria T and Hamel, Michael P and Kashwan, Prakash and Lewis, Quentin and Stepanov, Alexander},
|
||
month = feb,
|
||
year = {2009},
|
||
note = {Publisher: Sage Publications, Thousand Oaks CA},
|
||
keywords = {article, Property, Computer Software, 2682:environmental interactions, Access, Courses, Developing Countries, Geographic Information Systems, geographic information systems (GIS) online instruction open source software QGIS Open Source Geospatial Foundation, social geography},
|
||
pages = {118--129},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - SSCREH},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2010-10-21},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {Number of references - 4},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Courses; Geographic Information Systems; Computer Software; Access; Property; Developing Countries},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{solorzano_free_2009,
|
||
title = {Free {Software} {Communities} {Of} {Costa} {Rica}},
|
||
issn = {0482-5276, 0482-5276},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/free-software-communities-costa-rica/docview/881466863/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
abstract = {The free software communities of Costa Rica have been investigated between 2006-2008. To understand their structure and functioning we keep a participant observation and conduct an electronic poll and interviews. The results are analyzed under the virtual community concept. They consist of strategic users, with scarce female involvement, ephemeral proposals, a touch of elitism and share a dialogic discourse. Adapted from the source document.},
|
||
language = {Spanish},
|
||
number = {4-1},
|
||
journal = {Revista de Ciencias Sociales (San Jose, Costa Rica)},
|
||
author = {Solorzano, Sofia Flores},
|
||
year = {2009},
|
||
note = {Publisher: University of Costa Rica, San Jose},
|
||
keywords = {Females, Participation, Costa Rica, article, Computer Software, 0513: culture and social structure, culture (kinship, forms of social organization, social cohesion \& integration, \& social representations), Costa Rica, Computer Science, Virtual Community, Free Software, Open Code, Technical Aspects, Socialization, Discourse, Elitism},
|
||
pages = {143--152},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2011-08-04},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Costa Rica; Computer Software; Elitism; Participation; Females; Discourse},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{berry_poverty_2008,
|
||
title = {The {Poverty} of {Networks}: {The} {Wealth} of {Networks} by {Yochai} {Benkler} {New} {Haven}, {CT}: {Yale} {University} {Press}, 2007, pp. 515, {ISBN} 0 300 12577 1, pbk {L11}.99 {Decoding} {Liberation}: {The} {Promise} of {Free} and {Open} {Source} {Software} by {Samir} {Chopra} and {Scott} {Dexter} {New} {York}: {Routledge}, 2008, pp. 232, {ISBN} 0 415 97893 4, hbk {L60}.00 {The} {Exploit}: {A} {Theory} of {Networks} by {Alexander} {Galloway} and {Eugene} {Thacker} {Minneapolis}: {Minnesota} {University} {Press}, 2007, pp. 256, {ISBN} 0 816 65044 6, pbk {L12}.00},
|
||
volume = {25},
|
||
issn = {0263-2764, 0263-2764},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/poverty-networks-wealth-yochai-benkler-new-haven/docview/61752127/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.1177/0263276408097813},
|
||
abstract = {The use of networks as an explanatory framework is widespread in the literature that surrounds technology and information society. The three books reviewed here -- The Wealth of Networks by Yochai Benkler, Decoding Liberation: The Promise of Free and Open Source Software by Samir Chopra and Scott Dexter, and The Exploit: A Theory of Networks by Alexander Galloway and Eugene Thacker -- all make a claim to the novelty that networks provide to their subject matter. By looking closely at the way in which the network is utilized in each of the texts, this review attempts to question the extent to which a network analysis can ground a claim about a discontinuity in technology, society or economics. [Reprinted by permission of Sage Publications Ltd., copyright.]},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {7-8},
|
||
journal = {Theory, Culture \& Society},
|
||
author = {Berry, David M},
|
||
month = dec,
|
||
year = {2008},
|
||
note = {Publisher: Sage Publications, London UK},
|
||
keywords = {social network analysis, Theories, Networks, article, Information Society, 0665: complex organization, commons Deleuze information society networks open source rhizomatics theory},
|
||
pages = {364--372},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - TCSUD4},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2010-10-21},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {Number of references - 10},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Networks; Information Society; Theories},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{gallego_designing_2008,
|
||
title = {Designing a forecasting analysis to understand the diffusion of open source software in the year 2010},
|
||
volume = {75},
|
||
issn = {0040-1625, 0040-1625},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/designing-forecasting-analysis-understand/docview/61698239/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.1016/j.techfore.2007.02.002},
|
||
abstract = {Open source software (OSS) is being considered the new paradigm of software distribution. As contrasted with the traditional software marketing model, OSS pursues the freedom to have access to open source and offers several advantages to enterprises. These advantages include saving costs related to Information Systems and Technologies (IS/IT) and the possibility of adapting to changing organizational requirements. However, the recent forthcoming of OSS prevents us from knowing the real impact it has today on social and organizational fields. Having considered this obstacle, the authors have defined a foreseeable setting for OSS diffusion and adoption by means of a forecasting study based on the Delphi method for the year 2010. The findings reveal the levels of OSS diffusion for this year according to the main applications, geographic regions and industries. In a complementary manner, the authors have studied the elements of success as well as the most relevant obstacles for diffusing and adopting technological solutions based on OSS. [Copyright 2007 Elsevier Inc.]},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {5},
|
||
journal = {Technological Forecasting and Social Change},
|
||
author = {Gallego, M Dolores and Luna, Paula and Bueno, Salvador},
|
||
month = jun,
|
||
year = {2008},
|
||
note = {Publisher: Elsevier Science Publishing, Amsterdam The Netherlands},
|
||
keywords = {Diffusion, Information Technology, article, Computer Software, sociology of technology, Technological Innovations, 1772:sociology of science, Forecasting, Critical success factors, Technological Change},
|
||
pages = {672--686},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - TFSCB3},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2008-11-06},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Information Technology; Computer Software; Forecasting; Technological Innovations; Technological Change; Diffusion},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{gallego_designing_2008-1,
|
||
title = {Designing a forecasting analysis to understand the diffusion of open source software in the year 2010},
|
||
volume = {75},
|
||
issn = {00401625},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/designing-forecasting-analysis-understand/docview/205257823/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.1016/j.techfore.2007.02.002},
|
||
abstract = {Open source software (OSS) is being considered the new paradigm of software distribution. As contrasted with the traditional software marketing model, OSS pursues the freedom to have access to open source and offers several advantages to enterprises. These advantages include saving costs related to Information Systems and Technologies (IS/IT) and the possibility of adapting to changing organizational requirements. However, the recent forthcoming of OSS prevents us from knowing the real impact it has today on social and organizational fields. Having considered this obstacle, the authors have defined a foreseeable setting for OSS diffusion and adoption by means of a forecasting study based on the Delphi method for the year 2010. The findings reveal the levels of OSS diffusion for this year according to the main applications, geographic regions and industries. In a complementary manner, the authors have studied the elements of success as well as the most relevant obstacles for diffusing and adopting technological solutions based on OSS. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {5},
|
||
journal = {Technological Forecasting and Social Change},
|
||
author = {Gallego, M Dolores and Luna, Paula and Bueno, Salvador},
|
||
month = jun,
|
||
year = {2008},
|
||
note = {Place: New York
|
||
Publisher: Elsevier Science Ltd.},
|
||
keywords = {Open source software, Sociology, Studies, Open source, Software, Open-source software, Technology adoption, Technology transfer, 5240:Software \& systems, 9130:Experiment/theoretical treatment, Public domain, 7100:Market research, Delphi method, Software distribution, Success factors, Forecasting techniques},
|
||
pages = {672},
|
||
annote = {Copyright - Copyright Elsevier Science Ltd. Jun 2008},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2024-12-06},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{yates_how_2008,
|
||
title = {How {Open} {Source} {Software} and {Wireless} {Networks} are {Transforming} {Two} {Cultures}: {An} {Investigation} in {Urban} {North} {America} and {Rural} {Africa}},
|
||
volume = {4},
|
||
issn = {1832-3669, 1832-3669},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/how-open-source-software-wireless-networks-are/docview/868010378/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
abstract = {This paper explores how open source software and wireless networks enable digital inclusion in the United States and Africa. We begin by measuring the digital divide in these very different regions of the world. Our research demonstrates, both quantitatively and qualitatively, how the digital divide places populations in both regions at a disadvantage. Next we examine the role of these technologies in bridging the digital divide along three complementary dimensions. First, we show that both affordable technology and sound policy are necessary for digital inclusion. Second, we look at how these two technologies are extended, integrated, and customized in information and communication technology (ICT) solutions that are both creative and effective. Third, we describe how the hardware and software in networked systems have been tailored to support applications that are as diverse as the people using them. We also present a series of case studies that highlight specific wireless network and open source technologies and their impact on the education of children, as well as the development of local communities. Adapted from the source document.},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {6},
|
||
journal = {International Journal of Technology, Knowledge and Society},
|
||
author = {Yates, David J and McGonagle, Thomas and Tawileh, Anas},
|
||
year = {2008},
|
||
note = {Publisher: www.cg.publisher.com},
|
||
keywords = {Telecommunications, Information Technology, Internet, Africa, article, Computer Software, 1772: sociology of science, sociology of technology, North America, Access, Open Source Software (OSS, FOSS, FLOSS), Wireless Networks, Mesh Networks, Digital Divide, Technology and Policy, Digital Inclusion, Technology Policy},
|
||
pages = {145--158},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2011-05-18},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Access; Internet; Telecommunications; Information Technology; Africa; North America; Computer Software; Technology Policy},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{yates_how_2008-1,
|
||
title = {How {Open} {Source} {Software} and {Wireless} {Networks} are {Transforming} {Two} {Cultures}: {An} {Investigation} in {Urban} {North} {America} and {Rural} {Africa}},
|
||
volume = {4},
|
||
issn = {1832-3669},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/how-open-source-software-wireless-networks-are/docview/2736873664/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.18848/1832-3669/CGP/v04i06/55949},
|
||
abstract = {This paper explores how open source software and wireless networks enable digital inclusion in the United States and Africa. We begin by measuring the digital divide in these very different regions of the world. Our research demonstrates, both quantitatively and qualitatively, how the digital divide places populations in both regions at a disadvantage. Next we examine the role of these technologies in bridging the digital divide along three complementary dimensions. First, we show that both affordable technology and sound policy are necessary for digital inclusion. Second, we look at how these two technologies are extended, integrated, and customized in information and communication technology (ICT) solutions that are both creative and effective. Third, we describe how the hardware and software in networked systems have been tailored to support applications that are as diverse as the people using them. We also present a series of case studies that highlight specific wireless network and open source technologies and their impact on the education of children, as well as the development of local communities.},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {6},
|
||
journal = {International Journal of Technology, Knowledge and Society},
|
||
author = {Yates, David J and McGonagle, Thomas and Tawileh, Anas},
|
||
year = {2008},
|
||
note = {Place: Champaign
|
||
Publisher: Common Ground Research Networks},
|
||
keywords = {Open source software, Sociology, FOSS, Community, Information technology, Open source, Software, Open-source software, Case studies, Communications technology, Africa, Wireless networks, Public domain, 51711:Wired and Wireless Telecommunications Carriers (except Satellite), Property, Internet access, Digital divide, Digital Divide, Digital inclusion, Digital Inclusion, FLOSS), Mesh Networks, Open Source Software (OSS, Regions, System effectiveness, Technology and Policy, Technology policy, Wireless network, Wireless Networks},
|
||
pages = {145--158},
|
||
annote = {Copyright - Copyright © 2008, Common Ground Research Networks, All Rights Reserved},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2024-12-19},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Africa},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{noauthor_review_2007,
|
||
title = {Review: {Niels} {C}. {Taubert} (2006). {Produktive} {Anarchie}? {Netzwerke} freier {Softwareentwicklung} [{Productive} {Anarchy}? {Networks} of {Open} {Source} {Software} {Development}]},
|
||
volume = {8},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/review-niels-c-taubert-2006-produktive-anarchie/docview/869226706/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
abstract = {Open source software is software designed to allow anyone to use and make changes in the software. This practice often renders the product superior to more centralized models such as those used in commercial software companies. How is such a phenomenon possible in a time where nothing seems to be acquirable save by purchase? Niels C. TAUBERT's book Productive Anarchy? Networks of Open Source Software Development aims at a sociological understanding of the prerequisites and conditions for the success of open source software. One of the conclusions of TAUBERT's book is that the process of open software development needs to be understood as adaptive and experimental. A continuous feedback between the context of production and the context of application is the basis for robust and successful software production. One of the surprising results of the book is that the most important requirement for this feedback process is a set of norms--neutrality, communism, disinterestedness, and universalism--norms that Robert MERTON associated with academic science in the 1940s. If TAUBERT is right that these norms are to be found outside the world of institutional science in open source software development projects today, then his case study can be seen as an indicator for a new form of knowledge production in the 21st century, where the social relevance and responsibility of a research process are keys to successful innovation. With this book, which deserves a wide readership, TAUBERT makes an important contribution to our understanding of the successful organization of technology development. URN: urn:nbn:de:0114-fqs0701109},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
journal = {Forum : Qualitative Social Research},
|
||
year = {2007},
|
||
note = {Place: Berlin
|
||
Publisher: Freie Universität Berlin},
|
||
keywords = {Innovation, Open-source software, Knowledge economy, Software development, Software industry, Social Sciences: Comprehensive Works, Naturally occurring radioactive material, Norm, Robert Merton},
|
||
annote = {Copyright - Copyright Freie Universität Berlin 2007},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2024-08-26},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{schoonmaker_globalization_2007,
|
||
title = {Globalization from {Below}: {Free} {Software} and {Alternatives} to {Neoliberalism}},
|
||
volume = {38},
|
||
issn = {0012-155X, 0012-155X},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/globalization-below-free-software-alternatives/docview/61698268/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.1111/j.1467-7660.2007.00462.x},
|
||
abstract = {This article explores one of the central struggles over the politics of globalization: forging alternatives to neoliberalism by developing new forms of globalization from below. It focuses on a unique facet of this struggle, rooted in the centrality of information technologies for global trade and production, as well as new forms of media and digital culture. The analysis has four main parts: examining the key role of software as a technological infrastructure for diverse forms of globalization; conceptualizing the contradictory implications of three software business models for realizing the utopian potential of digital technology to develop forms of globalization from below; exploring how three free and open source software business models were put into practice by Red Hat, IBM and the Free Software Foundation; and analysing Brazilian software policy as a form of globalization from below that challenges the historical dominance of the global North and seeks to develop new forms of digital inclusion and digital culture. Adapted from the source document.},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {6},
|
||
journal = {Development and Change},
|
||
author = {Schoonmaker, Sara},
|
||
year = {2007},
|
||
note = {Publisher: Blackwell Publishers, Oxford UK},
|
||
keywords = {Neoliberalism, Centrality, Models, Information Technology, article, Computer Software, 0715: social change and economic development, social change \& economic development, Production},
|
||
pages = {999--1020},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - DECHEU},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2008-05-02},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Neoliberalism; Models; Information Technology; Production; Centrality; Computer Software},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{say_chan_retiring_2007,
|
||
title = {Retiring the {Network} {Spokesman}: {The} {Poly}-{Vocality} of {Free} {Software} {Networks} in {Peru}},
|
||
volume = {20},
|
||
issn = {0786-3012, 0786-3012},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/retiring-network-spokesman-poly-vocality-free/docview/61671114/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
abstract = {National legislation to mandate the use or consideration of Free/Libre and Open Source Software (FLOSS) in government institutions is increasingly emerging as a strategy for FLOSS advocates in Latin America and the broader developing world. Such movements for the political use and regulation of FLOSS mark a distinct turn in the objectives and work of FLOSS advocates, whose activities largely focused on the dissemination of FLOSS as a technological artifact. This paper investigates the network of diverse actors involved in promoting FLOSS legislation in Peru, one of the first nations where a movement for FLOSS legislation emerged. It emphasizes that crucial to the work of FLOSS' network actors is not their merely technological productivity, but their cultural and political productivity - that is, their ability to produce diverse body of meaning made both evident and mobile in narratives of FLOSS use and adoption. Adapted from the source document.},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {2},
|
||
journal = {Science Studies},
|
||
author = {Say Chan, Anita},
|
||
year = {2007},
|
||
note = {Publisher: Finnish Society for Science and Technology Studies/Novaco, Tampere, Finland},
|
||
keywords = {Politics, Peru, Productivity, Technology, Legislation, Culture, article, Computer Software, sociology of technology, 1772:sociology of science, Regulation, Discursive Practices, networks, free software, legislation, discursive practices, Latin America},
|
||
pages = {78--99},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - SCSTFQ},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2008-06-11},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {Number of references - 44},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Computer Software; Peru; Legislation; Regulation; Culture; Politics; Technology; Productivity; Discursive Practices},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{gross_review_2007,
|
||
title = {Review: {Niels} {C}. {Taubert} [2006]. {Productive} {Anarchy}? {Networks} of {Open} {Source} {Software} {Development}},
|
||
volume = {8},
|
||
issn = {1438-5627, 1438-5627},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/review-niels-c-taubert-2006-productive-anarchy/docview/61664267/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
abstract = {Open source software is software designed to allow anyone to use and make changes in the software. This practice often renders the product superior to more centralized models such as those used in commercial software companies. How is such a phenomenon possible in a time where nothing seems to be acquirable save by purchase? Niels C. TAUBERT's book Productive Anarchy? Networks of Open Source Software Development aims at a sociological understanding of the prerequisites and conditions for the success of open source software. One of the conclusions of TAUBERT's book is that the process of open software development needs to be understood as adaptive and experimental. A continuous feedback between the context of production and the context of application is the basis for robust and successful software production. One of the surprising results of the book is that the most important requirement for this feedback process is a set of norms-neutrality, communism, disinterestedness, and universalism-norms that Robert MERTON associated with academic science in the 1940s. If TAUBERT is right that these norms are to be found outside the world of institutional science in open source software development projects today, then his case study can be seen as an indicator for a new form of knowledge production in the 21st century, where the social relevance and responsibility of a research process are keys to successful innovation. With this book, which deserves a wide readership, TAUBERT makes an important contribution to our understanding of the successful organization of technology development. References. Adapted from the source document.},
|
||
language = {German},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
journal = {Forum Qualitative Sozialforschung/Forum: Qualitative Social Research},
|
||
author = {Gross, Matthias},
|
||
month = jan,
|
||
year = {2007},
|
||
note = {Publisher: Free University of Berlin, Germany},
|
||
keywords = {Norms, Social Networks, article, Computer Software, Technological Innovations, research methods/tools, 0104: methodology and research technology, Computer Assisted Research, open source software, science studies, innovation, scientific ethos},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2007-08-02},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Computer Software; Computer Assisted Research; Technological Innovations; Social Networks; Norms},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{demaziere_functioning_2007,
|
||
title = {The {Functioning} of a {Free} {Software} {Community}: {Entanglement} of {Three} {Regulation} {Modes}-{Control}, {Autonomous} and {Distributed}},
|
||
volume = {20},
|
||
issn = {0786-3012, 0786-3012},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/functioning-free-software-community-entanglement/docview/61663309/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
abstract = {The ability to build solid and coherent software from spontaneous, sudden and evanescent involvement is viewed as an enigma by sociologists and economists. The internal heterogeneity of project contributors questions the functioning of collective action: how can commitments that are so dissimilar be put together? Our objective is to consider FLOSS communities as going concerns which necessitate a minimum of order and common, shared, social rules to function. Through an in-depth and diachronic analysis of the Spip project, we present two classical modes of social regulation: a control regulation centred on the product and an autonomous regulation reflecting the differentiated commitments. Our data shows that the meaning, value and legitimacy of contributors' involvements are defined and rated more collectively, through exchanges, judgments, and evaluations. A third regulation mode, called distributed community regulation and aimed at creating and transforming shared rules that produces recognition and stratification, is then presented. Adapted from the source document.},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {2},
|
||
journal = {Science Studies},
|
||
author = {Demaziere, Didier and Horn, Francois and Zune, Marc},
|
||
year = {2007},
|
||
note = {Publisher: Finnish Society for Science and Technology Studies/Novaco, Tampere, Finland},
|
||
keywords = {Ethnography, Group Dynamics, article, Computer Software, sociology of technology, 1772:sociology of science, Free software, social regulation, Spip project, ethnographic approach, Social Order, Social Processes, Work Groups},
|
||
pages = {34--54},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - SCSTFQ},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2008-06-11},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {Number of references - 41},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Computer Software; Social Order; Social Processes; Ethnography; Group Dynamics; Work Groups},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{darking_towards_2007,
|
||
title = {Towards an {Understanding} of {FLOSS}: {Infrastructures}, {Materiality} and the {Digital} {Business} {Ecosystem}},
|
||
volume = {20},
|
||
issn = {0786-3012, 0786-3012},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/towards-understanding-floss-infrastructures/docview/61643971/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
abstract = {In this paper we present empirical work detailing the engagement practices of a large FLOSS project, the Digital Business Ecosystem (DBE). In common with many other FLOSS projects, the DBE project focused on the development of infrastructural software components. Infrastructures and FLOSS software exhibit multiplicity: as objects they both change and stay the same. Whilst the implications of multiplicity with respect to infrastructure have been well-documented, with respect to FLOSS, they remain under-explored. Through examining how the DBE engaged new participants we were able to explore the nature of the FLOSS software object by asking the implied question: engagement with what? We draw on recent analysis by Law and Singleton to show how the innovative yet non-existent potentiality of the DBE was as significant to engagement as its steadily growing codebase. We argue that acknowledging the materiality and immateriality of the FLOSS software object has important consequences for management of, and engagement with, FLOSS projects. Adapted from the source document.},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {2},
|
||
journal = {Science Studies},
|
||
author = {Darking, Mary L and Whitley, Edgar A},
|
||
year = {2007},
|
||
note = {Publisher: Finnish Society for Science and Technology Studies/Novaco, Tampere, Finland},
|
||
keywords = {Infrastructure, Development, Innovations, article, Computer Software, sociology of technology, Technological Innovations, 1772:sociology of science, FLOSS, infrastructures, innovation, materiality, engagement, Human Technology Relationship, Science and Technology},
|
||
pages = {13--33},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - SCSTFQ},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2008-06-11},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {Number of references - 68},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Computer Software; Technological Innovations; Human Technology Relationship; Development; Science and Technology; Infrastructure; Innovations},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{jones_comment_2007,
|
||
title = {{COMMENT}: {VIRTUAL} {NEIGHBORHOOD} {WATCH}: {OPEN} {SOURCE} {SOFTWARE} {AND} {COMMUNITY} {POLICING} {AGAINST} {CYBERCRIME}},
|
||
volume = {97},
|
||
issn = {00914169},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/comment-virtual-neighborhood-watch-open-source/docview/218442330/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
abstract = {Cybercrime-crime committed through the use of a computer-is a real and growing problem that costs governments, businesses, and individual computer users millions of dollars annually and that facilitates many of the same crimes committed in realspace, such as identity theft and the trafficking of child pornography, only on a larger scale. However, the current strategies deployed by law enforcement to combat cybercrime have proven ineffective. Borne out of traditional notions of criminal behavior, these strategies and tactics are often ill-suited to prevent or punish cybercrime, which often defies the traditional notions of criminal behavior bounded by the corporeal world such as scale and proximity. This Comment argues that a more effective methodology in the fight against cybercrime is to develop a model of community policing, in which the power to deter and prevent cybercrime is divested into the hands of individual computer users. One such strategy for achieving effective community policing against cybercrime is through the increased use of open-source software, software in which users are given access to the underlying source code and may make modifications to that source code in order to ameliorate vulnerabilities that may enable cybercrime. This Comment looks at the development of traditional community policing strategies and argues that the increased use of open source software-spurned by greater involvement by government and corporations-may be a more effective technique in the fight against cybercrime. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {2},
|
||
journal = {Journal of Criminal Law \& Criminology},
|
||
author = {Jones, Benjamin R},
|
||
year = {2007},
|
||
note = {Place: Chicago
|
||
Publisher: Northwestern University (on behalf of School of Law)},
|
||
keywords = {Open source software, Computer security, Police, Open-source software, Identity theft, Internet, Criminals, Cybercrime, Technological change, Freeware, Government subsidies, Vulnerability, Community policing, Computer viruses, Crime, Criminology And Law Enforcement, Neighborhood watch programs},
|
||
pages = {601--629},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - JCRLA},
|
||
annote = {Copyright - Copyright Northwestern University School of Law Winter 2007},
|
||
annote = {Document feature - References},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2023-12-14},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{perry_floss_2006,
|
||
title = {{FLOSS} as {Democratic} {Principle}: {Free} {Software} as {Democratic} {Principle}},
|
||
volume = {2},
|
||
issn = {1832-3669, 1832-3669},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/floss-as-democratic-principle-free-software/docview/856404752/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
abstract = {Using Free/Libre and Open Source Software in key areas of government can help improve the democratic process. Adapted from the source document.},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {3},
|
||
journal = {International Journal of Technology, Knowledge and Society},
|
||
author = {Perry, Mark and Fitzgerald, Brian},
|
||
year = {2006},
|
||
note = {Publisher: www.cg.publisher.com},
|
||
keywords = {Democracy, article, Property, Computer Software, 1772: sociology of science, sociology of technology, Free/Libre and Open Source Software, Democracy, Security, Core Government Infrastructure},
|
||
pages = {155--164},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2011-03-07},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Democracy; Computer Software; Property},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{shtern_keeping_2006,
|
||
title = {Keeping the {Gates} to the {Parliament} of ({Digital}) {Things}: {Free}/{Open} {Source} {Software}, {Public} {Policy}, {Citizenship} and {Technology}},
|
||
volume = {2},
|
||
issn = {1832-3669, 1832-3669},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/keeping-gates-parliament-digital-things-free-open/docview/856403895/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
abstract = {This paper will argue that there are intriguing potentialities in the F/OSS model for increased democratization of the technical infrastructure of the information society that remain unexplored. Adapted from the source document.},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {3},
|
||
journal = {International Journal of Technology, Knowledge and Society},
|
||
author = {Shtern, Jeremy},
|
||
year = {2006},
|
||
note = {Publisher: www.cg.publisher.com},
|
||
keywords = {Technology, article, Property, Information Society, 1772: sociology of science, sociology of technology, Citizenship, Free and Open Source Software Communication Policy, Political Philosophy, Digital Information and Communication Technologies},
|
||
pages = {173--180},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2011-03-07},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Information Society; Citizenship; Property; Technology},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{marshall_negri_2006,
|
||
title = {Negri, {Hardt}, {Distributed} {Governance} and {Open} {Source} {Software}},
|
||
volume = {3},
|
||
issn = {1449-2490, 1449-2490},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/negri-hardt-distributed-governance-open-source/docview/59998155/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
abstract = {This paper investigates the idea that governance has changed in the contemporary world so that there is no longer, if there ever was, simply a dominant power, or set of powers, which are able to exert control. Governance is distributed, rather than centralized, so it is not clear where responsibility lies. This fact may help current powers increase their power rather than creating a more democratic system. This paper discusses ideas about the concept of Empire within the context of the information society, showing how distributive governance is used to maintain power rather than increase democracy. References. Adapted from the source document.},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
journal = {PORTAL: Journal of Multidisciplinary International Studies},
|
||
author = {Marshall, Jonathan},
|
||
year = {2006},
|
||
note = {Publisher: Institute for International Studies, University of Technology Sydney, Australia},
|
||
keywords = {Democracy, Governance, Power, article, 0925:political sociology/interactions, Computer Software, Information Society, Political Systems, sociology of political systems, politics, \& power},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2007-04-01},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Governance; Information Society; Computer Software; Power; Political Systems; Democracy},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{perry_floss_2006-1,
|
||
title = {{FLOSS} as {Democratic} {Principle}: {Free} {Software} as {Democratic} {Principle}},
|
||
volume = {2},
|
||
issn = {1832-3669},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/floss-as-democratic-principle-free-software/docview/2734754808/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.18848/1832-3669/CGP/v02i03/55590},
|
||
abstract = {Using Free/Libre and Open Source Software in key areas of government can help improve the democratic process},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {3},
|
||
journal = {International Journal of Technology, Knowledge and Society},
|
||
author = {Perry, Mark and Fitzgerald, Brian},
|
||
year = {2006},
|
||
note = {Place: Champaign
|
||
Publisher: Common Ground Research Networks},
|
||
keywords = {Open source software, Sociology, Democracy, Software, Open-source software, Security, Free software, Government, Freeware, Property, Core Government Infrastructure, Democrat, Free/Libre and Open Source Software, Principles},
|
||
pages = {155--164},
|
||
annote = {Copyright - Copyright © 2006, Common Ground Research Networks, All Rights Reserved},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2023-11-26},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{marshall_negri_2006-1,
|
||
title = {Negri, {Hardt}, {Distributed} {Governance} and {Open} {Source} {Software}},
|
||
volume = {3},
|
||
issn = {1449-2490},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/negri-hardt-distributed-governance-open-source/docview/2201513753/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.5130/portal.v3i1.122},
|
||
abstract = {Negri and Hardt have described the mode of governance of the contemporary world as},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
journal = {Portal},
|
||
author = {Marshall, Jonathan},
|
||
year = {2006},
|
||
note = {Place: Sydney
|
||
Publisher: University of Technology Sydney - Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences},
|
||
keywords = {Open source software, Open source, Copyright, Software, Open-source software, Open Source, Governance, Distributed computing, Contemporary history, Distribution, Empire, Hardt, Humanities: Comprehensive Works, Multitude, Negri, Property},
|
||
annote = {Copyright - © 2006. This work is licensed under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2023-12-03},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{chopra_political_2005,
|
||
title = {The {Political} {Economy} of {Open} {Source} {Software}},
|
||
volume = {1},
|
||
issn = {1832-3669, 1832-3669},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/political-economy-open-source-software/docview/856404531/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
abstract = {A critique of open-source development, in which we argue that while it clearly manifests a number of anti-capitalist tendencies, it is essentially aligned with postmodern capitalist development models. Adapted from the source document.},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {7},
|
||
journal = {International Journal of Technology, Knowledge and Society},
|
||
author = {Chopra, Samir and Dexter, Scott D},
|
||
year = {2005},
|
||
note = {Publisher: www.cg.publisher.com},
|
||
keywords = {article, Property, Computer Software, 1772: sociology of science, sociology of technology, Political Economy, Open source software, Free software, Political economy},
|
||
pages = {127--134},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2011-03-07},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Political Economy; Computer Software; Property},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{osterloh_trust_2004,
|
||
title = {Trust and {Community} in {Open} {Source} {Software} {Production}},
|
||
volume = {26},
|
||
issn = {0171-5860, 0171-5860},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/trust-community-open-source-software-production/docview/60088240/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
abstract = {Open source software production is a successful new innovation model which disproves that only private ownership of intellectual property rights fosters innovations. It is analyzed here under which conditions the open source model may be successful in general. We show that a complex interplay of situational, motivational, \& institutional factors have to be taken into account to understand how to manage the 'tragedy of the commons' as well as the 'tragedy of the anticommons'. It is argued that the success of this new innovation model is greatly facilitated by a well balanced portfolio of intrinsic \& extrinsic motivation, low costs for contributors \& governance mechanisms that do not crowd out intrinsic motivation. 96 References. Adapted from the source document.},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
journal = {Analyse \& Kritik},
|
||
author = {Osterloh, Margit and Rota, Sandra},
|
||
month = dec,
|
||
year = {2004},
|
||
keywords = {Motivation, Copyrights, Public Goods, Trust, Property Rights, article, Computer Software, sociology of technology, Technological Innovations, 1772:sociology of science, High Technology Industries},
|
||
pages = {279--301},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2007-10-30},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {Number of references - 91},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Trust; High Technology Industries; Technological Innovations; Motivation; Computer Software; Copyrights; Property Rights; Public Goods},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{chan_coding_2004,
|
||
title = {Coding {Free} {Software}, {Coding} {Free} {States}: {Free} {Software} {Legislation} and the {Politics} of {Code} in {Peru}},
|
||
volume = {77},
|
||
issn = {00035491},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/coding-free-software-states-legislation-politics/docview/216477344/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.1353/anq.2004.0046},
|
||
abstract = {Chan presents a closer examination of the practices that surround the emergence of free software legislation in Peru. Presented before the Peruvian Congress in Dec 2001, Proposition 1609 proposed the mandatory adoption of the use of free software in all areas of Peru's government, making exceptions only where a developed enough free software application was not yet available. Addressing in its text issues of science, technology, and development, Proposition 1609's language emphasized the contemporary legal contradictions and constraints experienced by government in software use.},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {3},
|
||
journal = {Anthropological Quarterly},
|
||
author = {Chan, Anita},
|
||
year = {2004},
|
||
note = {Place: Washington
|
||
Publisher: Institute for Ethnographic Research},
|
||
keywords = {Politics, Peru, Software, Application software, Anthropology, Free software, Legislation, Government, Technological change, Language acquisition, Bills, Science and technology},
|
||
pages = {531--545},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - ANQUAT},
|
||
annote = {Copyright - Copyright Institute for Ethnographic Research Summer 2004},
|
||
annote = {Document feature - References},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2024-08-27},
|
||
annote = {Name - Brookings Institution; Microsoft Corp; Congress-US},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Peru},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{holtgrewe_articulating_2004,
|
||
title = {Articulating the {Speed}(s) of the {Internet}: {The} {Case} of {Open} {Source}/{Free} {Software}},
|
||
volume = {13},
|
||
issn = {0961-463X, 0961-463X},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/articulating-speed-s-internet-case-open-source/docview/60496947/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.1177/0961463X04040750},
|
||
abstract = {The Internet is widely considered as a key factor of speeding up social \& cultural change. It represents the merging of information \& communication technologies \& enables flows of information \& capital, \& communication \& cooperation regardless of space \&, possibly, time. This article explores the example of Open Source/Free Software development, ie, software development in self-organized projects based on a considerable share of voluntary work. Here, we find complex articulations of speeding up \& slowing down technological development. Open Source/Free Software projects complement the logic of speeding up technological progress \& of obsolescence with a reflexive logic of optionality, variety, \& sustainability which addresses the accessibility of technology \& knowledge as a precondition for future creativity beyond markets \& organizations. 51 References. [Reprinted by permission of Sage Publications Ltd., copyright 2004.]},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
journal = {Time \& Society},
|
||
author = {Holtgrewe, Ursula},
|
||
month = mar,
|
||
year = {2004},
|
||
keywords = {communication, Social Change, Telecommunications, Information Technology, Time, Internet, article, Computer Software, sociology of technology, 1772:sociology of science, Cultural Change, Technological Change, 0828:mass phenomena, Obsolescence, Technological Progress},
|
||
pages = {129--146},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - TIMSEB},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2007-04-01},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {Number of references - 51},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Internet; Time; Social Change; Cultural Change; Technological Progress; Computer Software; Information Technology; Telecommunications; Technological Change; Obsolescence},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{osterloh_trust_2004-1,
|
||
title = {Trust and {Community} in {Open} {Source} {Software} {Production}*},
|
||
volume = {26},
|
||
issn = {01715860},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/trust-community-open-source-software-production/docview/208532393/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.1515/auk-2004-0115},
|
||
abstract = {Open source software production is a successful new innovation model which disproves that only private ownership of intellectual property rights fosters innovations. It is analyzed here under which conditions the open source model may be successful in general. We show that a complex interplay of situational, motivational, and institutional factors have to be taken into account to understand how to manage the 'tragedy of the commons' as well as the 'tragedy of the anticommons'. It is argued that the success of this new innovation model is greatly facilitated by a well balanced portfolio of intrinsic and extrinsic motivation, low costs for contributors and governance mechanisms that do not crowd out intrinsic motivation.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
journal = {Analyse und Kritik},
|
||
author = {Osterloh, Margit and Rota, Sandra},
|
||
year = {2004},
|
||
note = {Place: Stuttgart
|
||
Publisher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH},
|
||
keywords = {Open source software, Motivation, Community, Open source, Trust, Social Sciences: Comprehensive Works},
|
||
pages = {279--301},
|
||
annote = {Copyright - Copyright Lucius \& Lucius Verlagsgesellschaft mbH Dec 2004},
|
||
annote = {Document feature - references},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2023-11-19},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{holtgrewe_-commodifying_2001,
|
||
title = {De-{Commodifying} {Software}? {Open} {Source} {Software} between {Business} {Strategy} and {Social} {Movement}},
|
||
volume = {14},
|
||
issn = {0786-3012, 0786-3012},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/de-commodifying-software-open-source-between/docview/60435803/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
abstract = {Focusing on open source software the origin, development, \& organization of a process of de-commodification is examined in an industry that relies on strong provisions to protect intellectual property. Open source denotes a cooperative \& voluntary mode of software development cross-cutting organizational boundaries \& transcending relations of market exchange. Starting with the Open Systems Movement in the late 1970s, which was driven by business strategic \& industrial policy interests \& complemented by a spirit of mutual support in professional communities, a social movement type of collective action has emerged which develops knowledge as a public good. Competent communities share the norms of the hacker culture \& cooperate in informal relations challenging the boundaries between private \& public goods. But the open source idea has also been transformed into a business strategy by companies who provide basic software products for free \& make money with complementary products \& services. 52 References. Adapted from the source document.},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {2},
|
||
journal = {Science Studies},
|
||
author = {Holtgrewe, Ursula and Werle, Raymund},
|
||
year = {2001},
|
||
keywords = {Social Movements, Commodification, Public Goods, Collective Action, article, Property, Computer Software, sociology of technology, 1772:sociology of science, Strategies},
|
||
pages = {43--65},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - SCSTFQ},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2007-04-01},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Computer Software; Commodification; Property; Strategies; Social Movements; Public Goods; Collective Action},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{price_gregory_1998,
|
||
title = {Gregory {Bateson} and the {OSS}: {World} {War} {II} and {Bateson}'s assessment of applied anthropology},
|
||
volume = {57},
|
||
issn = {00187259},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/gregory-bateson-oss-world-war-ii-batesons/docview/201154708/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
doi = {10.17730/humo.57.4.7428246q71t7p612},
|
||
abstract = {This article uses documents released from the Central Intelligence Agency under the Freedom of Information Act to examine Gregory Bateson's work for the Office of Strategic Services during World War II. The primary document under consideration is a position paper written by Bateson for the OSS in November 1944.},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {4},
|
||
journal = {Human Organization},
|
||
author = {Price, David H},
|
||
year = {1998},
|
||
note = {Place: Oklahoma City
|
||
Publisher: Taylor \& Francis Ltd.},
|
||
keywords = {Science, India, War, Anthropology, Social sciences, Freedom of information, Propaganda, Sciences: Comprehensive Works, United States--US, New York, Applied anthropology, Bateson, Gregory, Beat Generation, Gregory Bateson, Intelligence, Intelligence gathering, Intelligence services, North Africa, Washington DC, World war, World War II},
|
||
pages = {379--384},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - HUORAY},
|
||
annote = {Copyright - Copyright Society of Applied Anthropology Winter 1998},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2024-12-06},
|
||
annote = {Name - OSS; Office of Strategic Services--OSS},
|
||
annote = {People - Bateson, Gregory},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Bateson, Gregory; North Africa; United States--US; New York; India; Washington DC},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{price_gregory_1998-1,
|
||
title = {Gregory {Bateson} and the {OSS}: {World} {War} {II} and {Bateson}'s {Assessment} of {Applied} {Anthropology}},
|
||
volume = {57},
|
||
issn = {0018-7259, 0018-7259},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/gregory-bateson-oss-world-war-ii-batesons/docview/60078370/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
abstract = {Examines Gregory Bateson's work for the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) during WWII, using documents released from the Central Intelligence Agency under the Freedom of Information Act. The primary document under consideration is a position paper written by Bateson for the OSS in Nov 1944. outlining a number of methods \& strategies that US intelligence agencies might consider in the postwar period for gathering intelligence \& maintaining colonial order in India. This paper is discussed to highlight some of the largely undocumented work done by anthropologists during the war \& to understand why Bateson returned to his overall negative assessment of applied anthropology in the postwar period. 41 References. Adapted from the source document.},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
number = {4},
|
||
journal = {Human Organization},
|
||
author = {Price, David H},
|
||
month = jan,
|
||
year = {1998},
|
||
keywords = {India, Surveillance, Anthropology, article, Bateson, Gregory, World War II, 0514:culture and social structure, Anthropologists, Espionage, Government Agencies, Post World War II Period, social anthropology},
|
||
pages = {379--384},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - HUORAY},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2007-10-30},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Bateson, Gregory; Government Agencies; India; Anthropology; Espionage; Post World War II Period; World War II; Anthropologists; Surveillance},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{wolfe_book_1990,
|
||
title = {Book {Department}: {The} {O}.{S}.{S}. in {Italy}, 1942-1945},
|
||
volume = {512},
|
||
issn = {00027162},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/book-department-o-s-italy-1942-1945/docview/219491913/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
abstract = {Martin Wolfe reviews "The O.S.S. in Italy, 1942-1945: A Personal Memoir," by Max Corvo.},
|
||
language = {English},
|
||
journal = {Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science},
|
||
author = {Wolfe, Martin},
|
||
month = nov,
|
||
year = {1990},
|
||
note = {Place: Thousand Oaks
|
||
Publisher: SAGE PUBLICATIONS, INC.},
|
||
keywords = {Organizations, Political Science, Intelligence gathering, World War II, Corvo, Max, Nonfiction},
|
||
pages = {205},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - AAYPAV},
|
||
annote = {Copyright - Copyright SAGE PUBLICATIONS, INC. Nov 1990},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-06-25},
|
||
annote = {Name - Office of Strategic Services; OSS},
|
||
annote = {People - Corvo, Max},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Corvo, Max},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{lundby_we_1989,
|
||
title = {We {Entertain} {Ourselves} to {Death}. {Public} {Discourse} in the {Age} of the {Entertainment} {Industry}},
|
||
volume = {30},
|
||
issn = {0040-716X, 0040-716X},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/we-entertain-ourselves-death-public-discourse-age/docview/61038049/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
language = {Norwegian},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
journal = {Tidsskrift for samfunnsforskning},
|
||
author = {Lundby, Knut and Lundby, Knut},
|
||
year = {1989},
|
||
keywords = {culture, article, 0513: culture and social structure},
|
||
pages = {110--111},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - TSMFA4},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2007-04-01},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {SuppNotes - Edition date: 1987.},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{strand_children_1979,
|
||
title = {Children in {Traffic} {Accidents}: {What} {Does} the {Research} {Tell} {Us}?},
|
||
volume = {20},
|
||
issn = {0040-716X, 0040-716X},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/children-traffic-accidents-what-does-research/docview/61095771/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
abstract = {It is noted that children, who make up a large proportion of cyclists \& pedestrians in Norway, pay a disproportionate part of accident costs of motor traffic. It is also noted that while accident risk for adults has decreased since 1960, it has increased for children. It is concluded that remedial actions have favored the safety of motorists over that of children. Possible causes for this imbalance include: a M majority in political \& administrative organizations, the favoring of motor traffic in road planning, \& strong motor organizations as opposed to weak child protection, pedestrian, \& cyclist organizations. A change of course in traffic safety research financed by the Ministry of Communications during 1974-1981 to include greater concentration on different population groups is advocated. 1 Table, 8 Figures, 72 References. Modified HA.},
|
||
language = {Norwegian},
|
||
number = {5 -- 6},
|
||
journal = {Tidsskrift for samfunnsforskning},
|
||
author = {Strand, Arvid},
|
||
year = {1979},
|
||
keywords = {article, *Accident/Accidents, *Child/Children/Childhood, *Norway/Norwegian/Norwegians, *Traffic, 1938: the family and socialization, children in traffic accidents, Norway, pedestrians'/cyclists'/motorists' safety imbalance, sociology of the child},
|
||
pages = {573--598},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - TSMFA4},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2007-04-01},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2011-12-15},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - *Child/Children/Childhood; *Traffic; *Accident/Accidents; *Norway/Norwegian/Norwegians},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{strand_children_1979-1,
|
||
title = {Children in {Traffic} {Accidents}: {What} {Does} the {Research} {Tell} {Us}?},
|
||
volume = {20},
|
||
issn = {0040-716X, 0040-716X},
|
||
url = {http://turing.library.northwestern.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/children-traffic-accidents-what-does-research/docview/1463014052/se-2?accountid=12861},
|
||
abstract = {It is noted that children, who make up a large proportion of cyclists \& pedestrians in Norway, pay a disproportionate part of accident costs of motor traffic. It is also noted that while accident risk for adults has decreased since 1960, it has increased for children. It is concluded that remedial actions have favored the safety of motorists over that of children. Possible causes for this imbalance include: a M majority in political \& administrative organizations, the favoring of motor traffic in road planning, \& strong motor organizations as opposed to weak child protection, pedestrian, \& cyclist organizations. A change of course in traffic safety research financed by the Ministry of Communications during 1974-1981 to include greater concentration on different population groups is advocated. 1 Table, 8 Figures, 72 References. Modified HA.},
|
||
language = {Norwegian},
|
||
number = {5-6},
|
||
journal = {Tidsskrift for samfunnsforskning},
|
||
author = {Strand, Arvid},
|
||
year = {1979},
|
||
keywords = {article, 1938: the family and socialization, children in traffic accidents, Norway, pedestrians'/cyclists'/motorists' safety imbalance, sociology of the child, Accident/Accidents, Child/Children/Childhood, Norway/Norwegian/Norwegians, Traffic},
|
||
pages = {573--598},
|
||
annote = {CODEN - TSMFA4},
|
||
annote = {Date revised - 2013-12-01},
|
||
annote = {Last updated - 2016-09-28},
|
||
annote = {SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Child/Children/Childhood; Traffic; Accident/Accidents; Norway/Norwegian/Norwegians},
|
||
}
|