Knowledge Management for Self-Organised Resource Allocation

David Burth Kurka, J. Pitt, Josiah Ober
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

Many instances of socio-technical systems in the digital society and digital economy require some form of self-governance. Examples include community energy systems, peer production systems, participatory sensing applications, and shared management of communal living areas or workspace. Such systems have several features in common, of which three are that they are rule-oriented, self-organising, and value-sensitive, and in operation, this combination of features entails self-modification of the rules in order to satisfice a changeable set of values. This presents a fundamental dilemma for systems design. On the one hand, the system must be sufficiently unrestricted (resilient, flexible) to enable a diverse group but with a shared set of congruent values to achieve their joint purposes in collective action situations. On the other hand, it must be sufficiently restricted (stable, robust) to prevent a subset of the group from exploiting self-determination ‘against itself’ and usurp control of the system for the benefit of its own narrow interests. To address this problem, we consider a study of classical Athenian democracy which investigates how the governance model of the city-state flourished. The work suggests that exceptional knowledge management, i.e., making information available for socially productive purposes, played a crucial role in sustaining its democracy for nearly 200 years, by creating processes for aggregation, alignment, and codification of knowledge. We therefore examine the proposition that some properties can be generalised to resolve the rule-restriction dilemma by establishing a set of design principles intended to make knowledge management processes open, inclusive, transparent, and effective in self-governed social technical systems. We operationalise three of these principles in the context of a collective action situation, namely self-organised common-pool resource allocation, and present the results of a series of experiments showing how knowledge management processes can be used to obtain robust solutions for the perception of fairness, allocation decision, and punishment mechanisms. By applying this operationalisation of the design principles for knowledge management processes as a complement to institutional approaches to governance, we demonstrate empirically how it can satisfice shared values, distribute power fairly, and apply “common sense” in dealing with rule violations. We conclude by arguing that this approach to the design of socio-technical systems can provide a balance between restricted and unrestricted self-modification of conventional rules, and can thus provide the foundations for sustainable and democratic self-governance in socio-technical systems.
面向自组织资源配置的知识管理
数字社会和数字经济中的许多社会技术系统都需要某种形式的自治。例子包括社区能源系统、对等生产系统、参与式传感应用以及公共生活区域或工作空间的共享管理。这样的系统有几个共同的特征,其中三个是它们是面向规则的、自组织的和对值敏感的,并且在操作中,这些特征的组合需要对规则进行自我修改,以满足一组可变的值。这给系统设计带来了一个基本的困境。一方面,系统必须足够不受限制(有弹性、灵活),以使具有一套共同一致价值观的多样化群体能够在集体行动的情况下实现他们的共同目标。另一方面,它必须受到足够的限制(稳定、健全),以防止群体中的一个子集利用自决“反对自己”,并为了自己狭隘的利益篡夺对系统的控制。为了解决这个问题,我们考虑对古典雅典民主的研究,研究城邦的治理模式是如何蓬勃发展的。这项研究表明,卓越的知识管理,即为社会生产目的提供信息,通过创建知识的聚集、统一和编纂过程,在维持其近200年的民主中发挥了关键作用。因此,我们研究了这样一个命题,即通过建立一套旨在使知识管理过程在自治的社会技术系统中开放、包容、透明和有效的设计原则,可以概括一些属性来解决规则限制困境。我们在集体行动情境(即自组织的公共池资源分配)的背景下实施了其中的三个原则,并展示了一系列实验的结果,展示了如何使用知识管理过程来获得公平感知、分配决策和惩罚机制的稳健解决方案。通过将知识管理流程设计原则的这种操作化应用于治理的制度方法,我们从经验上证明了它如何能够满足共同的价值观,公平地分配权力,并在处理违规行为时应用“常识”。我们的结论是,这种设计社会技术系统的方法可以在限制和不限制的常规规则自我修改之间提供平衡,从而可以为社会技术系统中的可持续和民主自治提供基础。
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