{"id":7129,"date":"2018-05-16T03:00:19","date_gmt":"2018-05-16T03:00:19","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/peerproduction.net\/editsuite\/?page_id=7129"},"modified":"2018-06-30T18:39:15","modified_gmt":"2018-06-30T18:39:15","slug":"reviews","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"http:\/\/peerproduction.net\/editsuite\/issues\/issue-12-makerspaces-and-institutions\/peer-reviewed-papers\/redistributed-manufacturing-and-makerspaces\/reviews\/","title":{"rendered":"Reviews (Redistributed manufacturing and makerspaces)"},"content":{"rendered":"
Reviewer: Anonymous<\/strong><\/p>\n Is the subject matter relevant?<\/strong><\/p>\n Yes, since it directly addresses the issue of the institutionalization of shared machine shops, the contradictions and difficulties that go along with this process. The account builds on the discourse on Redistributed Manufacturing in the UK and on a survey across 97 shared machine shops (open nesta<\/em> dataset). Therefore, there is a potential for more general insights around the future of makerspaces.<\/p>\n Is the treatment of the subject matter intellectually interesting? Are there citations or bodies of literature you think are essential to which the author has not referred?<\/strong><\/p>\n The authors seem to be familiar with the specific discourse and provide important and interesting references.<\/p>\n Are there any noticeable problems with the author\u2019s means of validating assumptions or making judgments?<\/strong><\/p>\n Yes, unfortunately there are major shortcomings in how the authors analyze the data and how they draw conclusions from that. These strongly affect the line argument.First, the analysis of the dataset suggests that there are specific predominant \u201cactors\u201d across makerspaces in the UK. While the reader can imagine and understand that the table on p.12\/13 proofs an unequal distribution, it remains unclear how the authors conclude that this \u201cframing systematically reduces and excludes the communal, cultural and social dynamics of peer- and community production\u201d (13). How do the single characteristics (e.g. gender and brands) relate to each other? How does this prove a change from a wider to a narrower understanding? A longitudinal study would be necessary for making such a claim. The conclusion is therefore not convincing.<\/p>\n Secondly, single concepts like \u201cco-constitution\u201d, \u201ctechno-narrative\u201d, \u201csocial-technical-material\u201d are not thoroughly explained or systematically grounded in a broader theoretical understanding. What is, for instance, the theoretical difference between \u201ctechnological\u201d and \u201cmaterial\u201d and why do they need an equal and separate treatment? And to what extent is the \u201csocial\u201d dimension sufficiently covered by the mentioned metrics?<\/p>\n Thirdly, there is no discussion about the source, context, and possible limitations of the survey. What is the survey\u2019s origin? Are there any problems or limitations? Based on which methodological understanding do the authors aggregate the data into one single table?<\/p>\n Lastly, the connection of the fourth paragraph to the previous analysis is not sufficiently clear since they are based on very different kinds of data, a survey and a discourse analysis. Based on what methodological understanding can these very different data be bound together?<\/p>\n To conclude, the line of argument has too many shortcomings and requires a profound revision.<\/p>\n Is the article well written?<\/strong><\/p>\n The first parts, especially the introduction, are written in a comprehensible manner. However, there are a few problems as the amount and inclusion of tables in chapter 3 \u201cShared machine shops and the technonarrative of peer production\u201d do not support a fluent reading.<\/p>\n More problematic is chapter 4 \u201cShared Machine Shops and Redistributed Manufacturing as co-constitutionary\u201d that does not present the findings and arguments in a clear and coherent manner and also misses to make a clear point in the end. Especially the citations on page 17 are just listed and lack further explanation. Therefore, it is especially this chapter that should be fundamentally reworked.<\/p>\n Moreover, at various points it is hardly possible to follow the empirical storyline, especially for a reader that is not familiar with the context in the UK. For instance, it is not explained what EPSRC stands for; and \u201cFuture Maker Spaces\u201d (p. 5) are not introduced as something specific either.<\/p>\n Are there portions of the article that you recommend be shortened, excised or expanded?<\/strong><\/strong><\/p>\n See above.<\/p>\n How adequately does the paper address the special issue topic of ‘institutions and the institutionalisation’ of makerspaces, and how could the connection be improved (particularly within the three themes in the CfP)?<\/strong><\/p>\n The article claims to address the special issue but major revisions are necessary in order to underpin this account.<\/p>\n Where is there room for improvement in the presentation\/use of empirical material?<\/strong>As mentioned above, a more reflexive and deeper analysis of the data would improve the argument of the article.<\/p>\n Third, we provide you with the option to either a) recommend the paper is published, or b) recommend it is not.<\/strong><\/p>\n No, only with major revisions.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n Reviewer: Anonymous<\/strong><\/p>\n Is the subject matter relevant (to JoPP and the special issue)?<\/strong><\/p>\n Yes, it is relevant to both journal and special issue. The spine of the article is following how UK funding schemes and academic research on \u201credistributed manufacturing\u201d shapes the identity of shared machine shops, particularly by highlighting certain technologies (lasers) which are considered modern and backgrounding others (glass) considered antiquated. The schemes seek to integrate shared machine shops into the national manufacturing and service industry, as if they would have any industrial potential. The argument thus addresses the theme of the special issue in two ways: inquiring into the relationship between shared machine shops and larger social institutions; as well as on how such relationship triggers institutionalisation processes in the shared machine shops themselves. In the opinion of this reviewer, recuperation is one of the burning questions of the day that is vital to address in our publications and debate in our scholarly, practitioner and activist circles.<\/p>\n Is the treatment of the subject matter intellectually interesting? Are there citations or bodies of literature you think are essential to which the author has not referred?<\/strong><\/p>\n The treatment of the subject matter is intellectually interesting, but perhaps needs to be sharper (see next question). The paper is based on an extensive literature review and secondary analysis of an extended survey dataset (from Nesta). Its theoretical orientation and reference points are obviously close to the perspective of many other articles in JoPP, so it fits into the \u201cethos\u201d of the journal.<\/p>\n Are there any noticeable problems with the author\u2019s means of validating assumptions or making judgments?<\/strong><\/p>\n The author(s) lament the homogenisation and institutionalisation of shared machine shops, defending local ecologies of practices and favouring diversity in participant\u2019s profile, lab\u2019s techniques and materials. It is indeed important that the author(s) take sides on these issues, because JoPP at its best is an instrument for interventions in debates between scholars, practitioners, activists. In order to strengthen this point, the normative grounds from which the authors make these judgements could be explicitly clarified in the article. Then it would be possible to explain why variety and diversity in shared machine shops is better than standardisation and unity.<\/p>\n In general there are many valuable critical points in the article, and even better, they are backed up by sound empirical evidence. However, their presentation is veiled in an objectivist language of advantages and disadvantages, despite references to \u201cdialectics\u201d. I am curious how the same conclusions would sound phrased in terms of what is at stake, what can be win or lost in the institutionalisation process. The theoretical framework of \u201ctransition theory\u201d in fact works very well within the text and allows for what the author wants to say, but it may be that the limitations of its framing that lead to a picture of a social conflict around technological innovation as a wishy-washy affair. Simply for making my stance clear and suggesting material for consideration in future research along similar concerns, I mention as alternatives the theoretical framework of Technology and Product Oriented Movements from David J. Hess:\u00a0http:\/\/www.davidjhess.org\/TPMsFinal.pdf<\/a><\/p>\n \u2026 and the theoretical framework of critique and recuperation in technological cycles from Delfanti, Smith, S\u00f6derberg and maxigas, summarised here:\u00a0http:\/\/journals.sagepub.com\/doi\/full\/10.1177\/0306312717736387<\/a><\/p>\nReview B<\/h2>\n