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What is Social Order

Handbook of Research on Open Source Software: Technological, Economic, and Social Perspectives
A state of a group of actors that is characterized by a mutual adjustment of actions.
Published in Chapter:
The Social Order of Open Source Software Production
Jochen Gläser (Australian National University, Australia)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-59140-999-1.ch014
Abstract
This chapter contributes to the sociological understanding of open source software (OSS) production by identifying the social mechanism that creates social order in OSS communities. OSS communities are identified as production communities whose mode of production employs autonomous decentralized decision making on contributions and autonomous production of contributions while maintaining the necessary order by adjustment to the common subject matter of work. Thus, OSS communities belong to the same type of collective production system as scientific communities. Both consist of members who not only work on a common product, but are also aware of this collective work and adjust their actions accordingly. Membership is based on the self-perception of working with the community’s subject matter (software or respectively scientific knowledge). The major differences between the two are due to the different subject matters of work. Production communities are compared to the previously known collective production systems, namely, markets, organizations, and networks. They have a competitive advantage in the production under complete uncertainty, that is, when neither the nature of a problem, nor the way in which it can be solved, nor the skills required for its solution are known in advance.
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More Results
Power, Politics, and Social Work: The Need to Reinvent Social Work Around the World
Historical, political, social conflicting construction where power and domination are constitutive of it.
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