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Governing Online Community Platforms

Tobias Kretschmer, Johannes Loh and Sophia Wetzler

No 20463, CEPR Discussion Papers from Centre for Economic Policy Research

Abstract: This review article synthesizes the current literature on online community platforms, emphasizing their unique governance challenges and the implications for platform management and research. Unlike conventional multi-sided platforms, online communities rely heavily on voluntary contributions, decentralized coordination, and socioemotional incentives. Governance in these communities is often based on self-regulation, peer moderation, and informal norms, although formal roles and rules increasingly emerge as communities grow. The article explores mechanisms such as information seeding, signaling, contests, and reputation-based incentives to guide contributor behavior without compromising autonomy. Despite a rich body of research, several promising avenues remain underexplored. These include understanding the evolution of production and governance functions in decentralized settings, the interplay between cross-community participation, the impact of communication channel multiplicity, and the threat of community fragmentation due to platform dissatisfaction. As such, online communities not only represent distinct organizational forms but also serve as valuable testbeds for studying broader platform dynamics in environments with limited managerial control.

Keywords: Non-monetary; rewards (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: L17 L82 L86 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2025-07
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