Paradoxes of openness and distinction in the sharing economy - ScienceDirect

peter.suber's bookmarks 2018-11-01

Summary:

Abstract:  This paper studies four sites from the sharing economy to analyze how class and other forms of inequality operate within this type of economic arrangement. On the basis of interviews and participant observation at a time bank, a food swap, a makerspace and an open-access education site we find considerable evidence of distinguishing practices and the deployment of cultural capital, as understood by Bourdieusian theory. We augment Bourdieu with concepts from relational economic sociology, particularly Zelizer's “circuits of commerce” and “good matches,” to show how inequality is reproduced within micro-level interactions. We find that the prevalence of distinguishing practices can undermine the relations of exchange and create difficulty completing trades. This results in an inconsistency, which we call the “paradox of openness and distinction,” between actual practice and the sharing economy's widely articulated goals of openness and equity.

Link:

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0304422X15000881?via%3Dihub

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » peter.suber's bookmarks

Tags:

oa.economics_of oa.oer

Date tagged:

11/01/2018, 13:53

Date published:

11/01/2018, 09:54