The Journal of Peer Production - New perspectives on the implications of peer production for social change New perspectives on the implications of peer production for social change
Signals (Feminist Hackerspaces: The Synthesis of Feminist and Hacker Cultures) image

Signals are an important part of the JOPP peer review process. They are intended to widen the scope of publishable articles by placing the reputational cost of publication on authors rather than on the journal.

Please note:

Positive signal = 1, negative signal = 0, positive/negative signal = 0.5

Only signals marked with a “*” are used to calculate the JoPP Signal (on the peer reviewed paper pages).

Objective categories

Activist
Article proposes a critique of a policy or practice with specific action proposals or suggestions: 2/3

Academic*
Article follows conventions of academic research article — e.g. position in literature, cited sources, and claimed contribution: 3/3

Prospective
Article is based on developments that have not yet occurred: 0/3

Formalised
Article is based on formal logic or mathematical technique: 0/3

Language quality*
Standard of English expression in article is excellent: 3/3

Subjective categories

Scope of debate
Article addresses an issue which is widely known and debated: 2/3

Comprehensiveness*
Most related sources are mentioned in article [this is an invitation to careful selection rather than a demonstration of prowess in citation collection — i.e. apt and representative choices made in source citations]: 3/3

Logical flow*
Ideas are well organised in article: 3/3

Originality*
The argument presented in article is new: 2/3

Review impact
The article has been significantly changed as a result of the review process: 3/3


Commendations

Appraisal
Reviewers indicate their appreciation of the article in the form of a 50 word statement.

Reviewer A: The article foregrounds structural changes stemming from social conflicts in the hackerspaces scene, one of the highly visible components of the scene, pursuing a research programme for analysing the internal dymamics and contradictions of a phenomena which was monolithically formulated in the literature and putting it in wider social context.

Reviewer B: The article foregrounds structural changes stemming from social conflicts in the hackerspaces scene, one of the highly visible components of the scene, pursuing a research programme for analysing the internal dymamics and contradictions of a phenomena which was monolithically formulated in the literature and putting it in wider social context.

Reviewer C: The article addresses an important issue, the disjoint between an intersectional feminist culture and al hacker culture that is predominantly white, heterosexual and male. It describes feminist hackerspaces combining theoretically and empirical material.