Listen to a conversation that Frank van Laerhoven had with Ilia Murtazashvili.
Together with Jennifer Brick Murtazashvili, Martin Weiss, and Michael Madison, Ilia co-authored a recent IJC publication entitled Blockchain networks as knowledge commons.
Block chains are distributed append-only ledgers. The purpose of blockchains is to share resources – that is, knowledge, data and opportunities to use outputs created by networks. Knowledge commons are characterized by (i) the production of knowledge and information via one or more modes of action, (ii) institutions and other formal and informal structures for sharing these knowledge- and information resources, and (iii) governance processes that depend significantly on openness. In their article, Ilia and his colleagues convincingly show the usefulness of approaching block chain networks as knowledge commons as they rely on collectively managed technologies to pool distributed information.
Ilia is affiliated with the Graduate School of Public and International Affairs at the University of Pittsburg. Apart from an interest in block chain and knowledge commons, he is interested in American political development and the challenges of public administration and focuses his research on the relationship governance and legal titling in the developing world. Using the American frontier as an example, he investigates current challenges developing countries face, and how they can improve their prospects for economic development and political stability.
In case you want to learn more about topics akin to the topic discussed in this episode, may we suggest you check out some of the other titles in the International Journal of the Commons that look at technology-dependent and knowledge commons, such as:
Insight #12: Jeremy Caradonna on the history of sustainability thinking
031: Food as a commons and changing food narratives in a post-COVID19 world with Jose Luis Vivero-Pol
Insight #11: Mark Lubell on the ecology of games and polycentricity
Insight #10: Krister Andersson on reframing deforestation
030: The politics of geoengineering and climate change with Ina Möller
029: Network analysis and qualitative data sharing with Steven Alexander
Insight #9: Juan Camilo Cárdenas on teaching with games
028: Governing renewable natural resources and institutional analysis with Fiona Nunan
027: Social-ecological modeling, family life, and heading back to Spain with Irene Perez Ibarra
026: Comparative social-ecological fisheries research with Emily Darling and Georgina Gurney
025: Case study databases in commons and social-ecological systems research -- an IASC webinar
Insight #8 - María José Barragán on Galapagos multi-stakeholder agenda setting
Insight #7: Neal Haddaway on how to do a systematic literature review
024: Craft beer and transdisciplinarity with Barry Ness
Insight #6: Academic working culture
023: Policy engaged research, collective action, and the ecology of games with Mark Lubell
Insight #5: The challenge of frameworks
022: Sustainable food systems with Liz Carlisle
Insight #4: Harini Nagendra on structural biases
021: Linking Stoicism and sustainability with Kai Whiting
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