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Panel 10.2. Principled and pragmatic approaches to formation and governance of knowledge sharing communities

Chair: Greg Bloom

Ostrom Workshop, Indiana University

Panel Abstract

Designed for Track 10 (Commoning the Commons – Integrating Knowledge and Practice) this panel brings together veteran organizers Greg Bloom and Elizabeth Barry who will reflect on their field-tested principles and tactics for governance of knowledge-sharing communities. Bloom will present on the subject of a paper contributed to the Ostrom workshop – The Values of Having Values, about values statements as constitutional boundary objects. (Depending on the structure of the panel, Bloom may also reference a separate presentation about practical approaches to participatory research and development of common information infrastructure – referencing a visual vocabulary developed through the Open Referral Initiative.) Barry will present on the principles that can guide wise collective choices for technology selection and community self-governance, illustrated through local uses of the Pol.is occurring around the world, and the network governance model developed by a global community of hackers known as the Gathering for Open Science Hardware. We’d welcome other participants who can contribute practical knowledge that applies the theory of the commons to the work of community building and governance.

ZOOM
Monday, June 16, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCN255
Examining Digital Commons Movements and Their Values, Strategies, and Alignments
Mai Ishikawa Sutton
Commons Network / DWeb, USA

There are several parallel efforts to build digital commons. Each represents different institutions, constituents and approaches, flying under banners with their distinct terminologies: digital public infrastructure (https://publicinfrastructure.org/about/), decentralized web (https://getdweb.net/principles/), and platform cooperativism (https://platform.coop/), to name a few. What these movements have in common is a recognition that network technologies serve communities better when they are treated as public goods — tools that are designed, governed, or owned in a manner that puts the people building and using them at the center over the sole pursuit of profit. They also recognize that democratic or participatory governance of digital infrastructure can happen at every layer of the network stack.

This session will present these distinct but seemingly aligned movements to build digital infrastructure that is governed and managed by their communities of users, technologists, and other stakeholders. We will present the organizing principles of these movements, as well as their stakeholders and approaches. Following a short presentation, we will hold a discussion amongst participants reflecting on how these movements differ, how they are similar, and how they can work and complement each other to build healthy, distributed, and community-stewarded digital networks.

Values in Governance Technology
in-person
Liz Barry
Metagov

We identity two core problems in technology used in governance: simulation and extraction. We pose new values for guiding the use and design of technology for governance: empowerment to self-rule and the development of the capacities for self-rule. Drawing on a long tradition of participatory democratic theory, we offer a framework for evaluating the uses and designs of governance technologies. We then conclude with notes on how to apply these values to possible uses of AI in deliberative processes. We believe this framework will be of interest both to those interested primarily in ensuring good government, and to those more concerned with the intrinsic benefits of popular self-government.

The Value of Declaring Your Values: Normative Instruments for Collective choice-making
in-person
Greg Bloom

Values statements can be used to draw lines, so to speak, in the sand. Especially (though not exclusively) when considering knowledge resources, value statements can be understood as boundary objects that enable diverse interests to be constructively aligned through institutional design. This presentation will consider examples of common value statements – such as “open” and “smart,” among others – to illustrate the institutional challenge of constructing normative boundaries that are simultaneously universal and concrete, and to illuminate the role that value statements can play in designing institutional strategies and rules. We will also discuss practical approaches to drafting value statements through democratic processes.

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  • General Program
  • Panel Schedule Oral Presentations
  • Poster Presentations
  • IASC 2025 Social System Map
  • IASC 2025 Slack Workspace
  • Teamup Calendar (also see below in your local time)

About the Conference

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Conference theme & sub-themes

Online Components

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