Copyright
Leonhard Dobusch; Maximilian HeimstädtPublished On
2026-05-27Language
- English
Print Length
10 pagesTHEMA
- JP
- JPA
- JHB
- JBCT
- UY
- UT
BISAC
- POL063000
- POL050000
- SOC026000
- SOC052000
- COM079000
- COM060000
Keywords
- Open knowledge infrastructures
- Digital governance
- Digital commons
- Politics of technology
- Open source and open access
- Epistemic justice
17. Open Digital Infrastructures for Democratic Resilience and Economic Sovereignty
Abstract: This chapter advances six theses on why digital resilience and economic sovereignty in platformised societies depend on the systematic strengthening of open digital infrastructures. It argues that proprietary, centralised platforms generate structural dependencies, democratic vulnerabilities and economic lock-in effects, while open standards, open protocols and free software enable decentralisation, interoperability and collective self-empowerment. Conceptualising open digital infrastructures as digital commons shifts attention from problems of overuse to challenges of provision, maintenance and sustainable financing. Treating open infrastructures as essential public services, comparable to transport or energy networks emphasises responsibilities of the state in funding and regulating such infrastructures. Yet, to avoid undermining their decentralised character, pluralistic governance arrangements and new legal forms of public social ownership such as public infrastructure funds, mandatory commons contributions and multi-stakeholder oversight are needed.
Contributors
Leonhard Dobusch
(author)Leonhard Dobusch is Professor of Business Administration with focus on Organization at the University of Innsbruck, Austria and Academic Director of the Vienna-based Momentum Institute. His research interests include openness as an organizing principle and private regulation via standards, specifically in the field of intellectual property.
Maximilian Heimstädt
(author)Maximilian Heimstädt is Professor of Business Administration, in particular Digital Governance and Service Design, at Helmut Schmidt University in Hamburg. His research focuses on the relationship between digital technologies and expert work in public organisations and organised publics.