1st Edition

The Economy of Collaboration The New Digital Platforms of Production and Consumption

By Francesco Ramella, Cecilia Manzo Copyright 2021
    216 Pages 5 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    216 Pages 5 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Over the past few decades, the world economy has undergone radical transformations, in part connected to the expansion of the ‘digital economy’, in part to the growing interconnection via the internet of the world of objects and physical processes. This ‘great transformation’ poses the dilemma on the capitalism’s ability to reconcile economic and social value, keeping together economic well-being, social cohesion and political freedom.

    The Economy of Collaboration can offer a contribution in this direction but requires courageous policies to mediate the various interests at stake, as well as to rethink and make more sustainable its development, by increasing the benefits not only for businesses but also for workers and consumers. In short, to create shared value.

    This book refers to a mode of organizing the production, distribution and consumption of goods and services based on cooperative relations. The main reference is to activities linked to the digital economy, since they are the emerging forms of a definitely older phenomenon, but which is expanding on an ever-wider scale thanks to new technologies. These collaborative activities can be regulated differently, along a continuum that ranges from the pole of market exchanges to that of generalized reciprocity, with various intermediate mixed forms.

    Introduction: What is the Economy of Collaboration?

    Part I: Between Production and Consumption

    1. The Drivers of the Economy of Collaboration

    2. What is Smart Manufacturing?

    3. What is the Sharing Economy?

    Part II: Sectoral Perspectives

    4. The Sphere of Innovation

    5. The Sphere of Consumption, Production and Services

    6. The Sphere of Financing

    Part III: Research Perspectives: The Infrastructures of Collaboration

    7. The Fab Labs: Collective Goods in the Collaborative Economy

    8. Peer-to-Peer Platforms: Three Case Studies

    Conclusions

    Biography

    Francesco Ramella is a Professor of Economic Sociology at the University of Torino, Italy, where he is Co-Director of the ‘Luigi Bobbio’ Center. He co-founded and was the first president of the Italian Society of Economic Sociology. In 2016, he published the Sociology of Economic Innovation.

    Cecilia Manzo is an Assistant Professor of Economic Sociology at the Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Italy.