Alternative Data Futures: Cooperative Principles, Data Trusts, and the Digital Economy

= Alternative Data Futures: A Living Syllabus = The Alternative Data Futures: Cooperative Principles, Data Trusts, and the Digital Economy Research Sprint was launched by the Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University and the The New School’s  Platform Cooperativism Consortium in October 2021. The Research Sprint model developed by Berkman and its collaborators is a highly intensive 4 to 9 week period of seminars and workshops led by subject matter experts on an overarching thematic area of focus related to technology, ethics, and policymaking. In general, participants are early-career academics or practitioners who are tasked with working in small groups to develop outputs (e.g. white papers, data visualizations, policy playbooks) related to a set of questions or challenges.

Introduction
This syllabus and assorted materials were created for the Alternative Data Futures: Cooperative Principles, Data Trusts, and the Digital Economy Research Sprint, a project organized and run by the Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University in collaboration with The New School’s  Platform Cooperativism Consortium. Beginning in October 2021, the research sprint brought early scholars and practitioners from around the world together to study social, legal, and technological opportunities and challenges to community ownership of data and data governance approaches rooted in cooperative principles and practices. Visitors are invited and encouraged to explore the materials and use them.

Course Description
Around the world, a growing number of governments, businesses, and citizen collectives are turning toward data trusts, data cooperatives, and data collaboratives as possible answers for responsible, commons-oriented data management. A data trust is a legal entity that collects and manages personal information on behalf of its members. Although many questions about the functioning of data trusts are still under development, proponents argue cooperative approaches to data could offer users more privacy, democratic control over the use of their data, facilitate research and public interest innovation, among other potential benefits.

The Fall 2021 Research Sprint explored strategies for alternative forms of power, ownership, and control in the digital economy. Participants considered reconfiguring online platforms and services to allow for more democratic access, governance, ownership, and the use of data. A primary goal of the Sprint was to have participants work together in small groups to investigate research or policy questions in this space. Participants were not expected to create narrowly customized solutions or endorse specific approaches to the research or policy questions they pursued, and were given wide latitude to pursue research questions of their own design. The Sprint will required interdisciplinary collaboration and mutual learning with participants and experts from many disciplines and across the globe.

Learning Modules
On each of the module pages, you will find an introduction to the topic, some external resources to explore, and a recording of the presentation. Learners can explore these modules in sequence or just those that are most relevant.

Readings
Week 1 - Foundational texts:
 * Essays
 * Scholz, Trebor. “Platform Cooperativism vs. the Sharing Economy.” Medium, Dec 5, 2014.
 * Academic
 * Hafen, Ernst. “Personal Data Cooperatives – A New Data Governance Framework for Data Donations and Precision Health.” The Ethics of Medical Data Donation, edited by Jenny Krutzinna et. al., Springer, 16 January 2019. pp. 141–149. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-04363-6_9
 * Policy Papers/Reports
 * Borkin, Simon. “Platform Co-Operatives - Solving the Capital Conundrum.” Co-operatives UK & Nesta Foundation, February 2019.
 * Journalism
 * Heffernan, Marget. “How workers can profit by taking control of technology.” Financial Times. April 17, 2017.
 * Pasquale, Frank. “Will Amazon Take Over the World?” Text. Boston Review, July 20, 2017.
 * Gorenflo, Neal. "How Platform Coops Can Beat Death Stars Like Uber to Create a Real Sharing Economy" Shareable, November 4, 2015.
 * Book Chapters
 * Scholz, Trebor. Uberworked and Underpaid: How Workers Are Disrupting the Digital Economy. 1 edition. Cambridge, UK; Malden, MA: Polity, 2016. pp. 155-192
 * Books
 * Ours to Hack and to Own. The Rise of Platform Cooperativism, a New Vision for the Future of Work and a Fairer Internet. by Scholz, Trebor; Schneider, Nathan. eds.
 * Podcasts
 * Conversation with Trebor Scholz by Upstream Podcast (Listening Time - 53:32)
 * Other Resources
 * The YouTube Channel of the Platform Cooperativism Consortium
 * Platform Cooperative Website
 * Platform Co-op Library

Week 2
 * Multi-Stakeholder Cooperatives
 * Münker, Hans. Multi-stakeholder co-operatives and their legal framework
 * Solidarity as a Business Model
 * Solidarity as a Business Model - A Multiplayer Cooperatives Model by Cooperative Development Center @ Kent State University
 * Law Article
 * When a Workers’ Cooperative Works: The Case of Kerala Dinesh Beedi by Mitu Fulati, T.M. Thomas Isaac, and William A. Klein
 * Other Resources
 * Anu Puusa’s TED talk about Cooperativism in Finland (Video Time: 11:36)
 * Coopedia - Online library for coops

Contributors
This project is the culmination of many different people's support, insight, and work.

Program Contributors
Uma Rani Amara, Faiza Haupt, Laird Brown, Javier Creus, Ines Lopez, Vernon Dosch, Esteban Kelly, Jason Spicer, Sylvie Delacroix, Mark Surman, Francesca Bria, Anita Gurumurthy, Primavera De Filippi, Josh Tan, Isabella Ipollito, Alex Pentland (In order of participation.)

Participant Contributors
Ana Aguirre Uriz, Elettra Bietti, Adriane Clomax, Noah DiAntonio, Ander Etxeberria, Megan Kelleher, Morshed Mannan, Kelsie Nabben, Sadev Parikh, Novita Puspasari, Sadhana Sanjay, Janis Wong

Core Faculty and Staff Contributors
Valerie Gomez, Adam Nagy, Dr. Trebor Scholz, Dr. Elisabeth Sylvan