AkrichM.RabeharisoaV.. 2012. “L’Expertise Profane Dans les Associations de Patients, un Outil de Démocratie Sanitaire.” Santé Publique24 (1): 69–74.
2.
BarronA.2013. “Free Software Production as Critical Social Practice.” Economy and Society42 (4): 597–625.
3.
BerryD.2004. “The Contestation of Code: A Preliminary Investigation into the Discourse of the Free/Libre and Open Source Movements.” Critical Discourse Studies1 (1): 65–89.
4.
BoltanskiL.ChiapelloE.. 2005. The New Spirit of Capitalism. New York: Verso.
FlemingP.2009. Authenticity and the Cultural Politics of Work. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
7.
HessD.2005. “Technology- and Product-oriented Movements: Approximating Social Movement Studies and Science and Technology Studies.” Science, Technology, & Human Values30 (4): 515–35.
8.
LiuA.2004. The Laws of Cool. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
9.
Maxigas. 2012. “Hacklabs and Hackerspaces. Tracing Two Genealogies.” Journal of Peer Production1 (2). Accessed July 1, 2015. http://peerproduction.net/issues/issue-2/.
10.
O’MahonyS. 2003. “Guarding the Commons: How Community Managed Software Projects Protect Their Work.” Research Policy32 (7): 1179–98.
11.
OudshoornN.PinchT.. 2005. “How Users and Non-users Matter.” In How Users Matter. The Co-construction of Technologies and Users, edited by OudshoornN.PinchT., 4–22. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
12.
TkaczN.2012. “From Open Source to Open Government: A Critique of Open Politics.” Ephemera12 (4): 386–405.