http://www.ecolise.eu/?p=577

*The Copernicus Institute of Sustainable Development, Utrecht University,
The Netherlands, has launched a call for papers for the first International
Workshop on the Sharing Economy on 4-5 June 2015.*

[image: utrecht]
<http://www.ecolise.eu/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/utrecht.jpg>

In a strict sense, the sharing economy can be defined as consumers granting
each other (“peer-to-peer”) temporary access to their under-utilized
physical assets, possibly for money. In a broader sense, the sharing
economy also includes peer-to-peer services (Uber, Lending Club,
Taskrabbit, Helpling), product-service systems (Zipcar, Philips lighting)
and redistribution markets (eBay, freecycling groups on Facebook).

Along with its rapid growth, however, the sharing economy has also come
under fire. This criticism focuses in particular on unfair competition
between platforms and regular companies, overrated environmental gains, the
tendency towards monopoly and the erosion of workers’ rights. In sum,
sharing practices yield promises and problems, which only recently have
become subject of scientific research.

This workshop aims to bring together researchers from all disciplines and
regions to discuss scientific research on the sharing economy. *Send in
your full paper or extended abstract to [email protected] <[email protected]>
before March 15, 2015.*



..................................................


http://www.uu.nl/en/events/first-international-workshop-on-the-sharing-economy

>From 4 June 2015 08:30 to 5 June 2015 17:30
First international workshop on the sharing economy

The sharing economy is a fast-growing phenomenon. People increasingly share
their home, car, clothing or tools on Internet platforms such as Airbnb,
Relayrides, BlaBlaCar and Peerby. In a strict sense, the sharing economy
can be defined as consumers granting each other (“peer-to-peer”) temporary
access to their under-utilized physical assets, possibly for money. In a
broader sense, the sharing economy also includes peer-to-peer services
(Uber, Lending Club, Taskrabbit, Helpling), product-service systems
(Zipcar, Philips lighting) and redistribution markets (eBay, freecycling
groups on Facebook) (Botsman and Rogers 2010).

Sharing practices are certainly not new, but the phenomenon is showing
explosive growth concomitant with the advent of Internet platforms. For
instance, Airbnb offers more than 1 million houses, Peerby has 100.000
members, and Uber is active in over 200 cities around the world. Sharing
potentially has a lot to offer to society: it promotes the efficient
utilization of physical assets, it reduces their environmental impact and
facilitates new social contacts. Along with its rapid growth, however, the
sharing economy has also come under fire. This criticism focuses in
particular on unfair competition between platforms and regular companies,
overrated environmental gains, the tendency towards monopoly and the
erosion of workers’ rights (Schor 2014; The Economist 2015). In sum,
sharing practices yield promises and problems, which only recently have
become subject of scientific research.

This workshop aims to bring together researchers from all disciplines and
regions to discuss scientific research on the sharing economy. Among the
questions are:

   - What theoretical perspectives (e.g., economics, sociology, geography,
   innovation studies) help to explain the nature and growth of the sharing
   economy?
   - What are the economic, social and environmental impacts of the sharing
   economy?
   - What are the business models in the sharing economy and why do some
   succeed and others do not?
   - What are the governance modes of platforms and why do some succeed and
   other do not?
   - How do sharing platforms disrupt existing industries?
   - How can peer-to-peer sharing in consumption be applied in a
   business-to-business context?
   - Why is sharing more popular in some industries and in some localities
   rather than in others?
   - What are the institutional responses across industries and across
   localities?
   - What are motivations and characteristics of sharing economy
   participants?
   - What do sharing practices mean for the new product design?
   - Is there a new role for consumers in the sharing economy?
   - What is the relationship between the sharing economy and
   sustainability transitions?
   - Are we observing fundamentally new ways of innovation in the sharing
   economy (open innovation, grassroots innovation, institutional
   entrepreneurship)?
   - Does the sharing economy prepare the way for new forms of capitalism?
   - How does sharing affect inequality in society?

Deadline

Send in your full paper or extended abstract (750-1000 words) to Koen
Frenken <[email protected]> before March 15, 2015. You will be notified about
acceptance before April 1st, 2015.
Keynotes

Juliet Schor (Boston College) and Susan Shaheen (UC Berkeley)
Scientific Committee

Koen Frenken (Utrecht University & Lund University),
Juliet Schor (Boston College),
Susan Shaheen (UC Berkeley),
Bernhard Truffer (EAWAG & Utrecht University),
Wouter Boon (Utrecht University)
Local organizing Committee

Koen Frenken (Utrecht University & Lund University),
Wouter Boon, Toon Meelen, Peter Pelzer (all Utrecht University)
Special issue

We envisage the publish a selection of papers in a special issue.
References

   - Botsman, R., Rogers, R. (2010) What’s mine is yours. How collaborative
   consumption is changing the way we live (London: Collins)
   - Schor, J. (2014) Debating the sharing economy
   <http://greattransition.org/publication/debating-the-sharing-economy>,
   Great Transition Initiative
   - The Economist (2015) The on-demand economy. Workers on tap. January
   3rd.

Sponsors

Copernicus Institute of Sustainable Development
<http://www.uu.nl/onderzoek/copernicus-institute-of-sustainable-development>
at Utrecht University,

Strategic Theme “Institutions” <http://www.uu.nl/en/research/institutions>
at Utrecht University

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