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Institutional Isomorphism in Web3: same same but different?
Author(s)
Date Issued
2024-07-01
Date Available
2024-07-19T09:27:54Z
Abstract
Like an online carnival, Web3 aims to turn the internet’s social order upside down. Unlike a carnival, Web3 wants to be more than a week-long party, and morph into a legitimate substitute of the internet’s status quo. Web3's secret sauce for upheaval are decentralized, permissionless technologies, in particular blockchain technologies. In this exploratory paper we draw on the concept of institutional isomorphism to muse about Web3's future and to highlight the inherent tension between striving to be different from Web2 yet wanting to become more legitimate. We argue that technical merits are hardly enough to realize Web3's high aspirations. Regulatory pressures, rampant uncertainty and the professional norms of Web3 participants drive the space to adopt many of the organizational structures and practices that it aims to displace. To maintain divergence from Web2, despite isomorphic pressures, we suggest it is important to increase the overall diversity of people in Web3, to double down on the value of decentralization, and to reaffirm Web3's commitment to creatively re-imagine various institutional arrangements.
Type of Material
Book Chapter
Publisher
Emerald
Series
Research in the Sociology of Organizations
Vol. 89
Copyright (Published Version)
2024 the Authors
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
Journal
DuPont, Q., Kavanagh, D. and Dylan-Ennis, P. (eds.). Defining Web3: A Guide to the New Cultural Economy
ISBN
978-1-83549-600-8
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
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Name
06_merk and hoefer.pdf
Size
358.35 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum (MD5)
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