Difference between revisions of "Don'T Look Now, But We'Ve Created a Bureaucracy: the Nature and Roles of Policies and Rules in Wikipedia"

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'''Don'T Look Now, But We'Ve Created a Bureaucracy: the Nature and Roles of Policies and Rules in Wikipedia''' - scientific work related to Wikipedia quality published in 2008, written by Brian S. Butler, Elisabeth Joyce and Jacqueline C. Pike.
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'''Don'T Look Now, But We'Ve Created a Bureaucracy: the Nature and Roles of Policies and Rules in Wikipedia''' - scientific work related to [[Wikipedia quality]] published in 2008, written by [[Brian S. Butler]], [[Elisabeth Joyce]] and [[Jacqueline C. Pike]].
  
 
== Overview ==
 
== Overview ==
Wikis are sites that support the development of emergent, collective infrastructures that are highly flexible and open, suggesting that the systems that use them will be egalitarian, free, and unstructured. Yet it is apparent that the flexible infrastructure of wikis allows the development and deployment of a wide range of structures. However, authors find that the policies in Wikipedia and the systems and mechanisms that operate around them are multi-faceted. In this descriptive study, authors draw on prior work on rules and policies in organizations to propose and apply a conceptual framework for understanding the natures and roles of policies in wikis. Authors conclude that wikis are capable of supporting a broader range of structures and activities than other collaborative platforms. Wikis allow for and, in fact, facilitate the creation of policies that serve a wide variety of functions.
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Wikis are sites that support the development of emergent, collective infrastructures that are highly flexible and open, suggesting that the systems that use them will be egalitarian, free, and unstructured. Yet it is apparent that the flexible infrastructure of wikis allows the development and deployment of a wide range of structures. However, authors find that the policies in [[Wikipedia]] and the systems and mechanisms that operate around them are multi-faceted. In this descriptive study, authors draw on prior work on rules and policies in organizations to propose and apply a conceptual framework for understanding the natures and roles of policies in wikis. Authors conclude that wikis are capable of supporting a broader range of structures and activities than other collaborative platforms. Wikis allow for and, in fact, facilitate the creation of policies that serve a wide variety of functions.

Revision as of 07:32, 8 June 2019

Don'T Look Now, But We'Ve Created a Bureaucracy: the Nature and Roles of Policies and Rules in Wikipedia - scientific work related to Wikipedia quality published in 2008, written by Brian S. Butler, Elisabeth Joyce and Jacqueline C. Pike.

Overview

Wikis are sites that support the development of emergent, collective infrastructures that are highly flexible and open, suggesting that the systems that use them will be egalitarian, free, and unstructured. Yet it is apparent that the flexible infrastructure of wikis allows the development and deployment of a wide range of structures. However, authors find that the policies in Wikipedia and the systems and mechanisms that operate around them are multi-faceted. In this descriptive study, authors draw on prior work on rules and policies in organizations to propose and apply a conceptual framework for understanding the natures and roles of policies in wikis. Authors conclude that wikis are capable of supporting a broader range of structures and activities than other collaborative platforms. Wikis allow for and, in fact, facilitate the creation of policies that serve a wide variety of functions.