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The Ecology of Standards
Processes: Insights from Internet Standard Making
Jeffrey V. Nickerson and
Michael zur Muehlen
Abstract
In order to create
Internet standards, people and ideas move across many institutions. By
drawing upon the new institutionalism and on organizational ecology, we
develop an ecological approach to studying this movement. The approach
examines the birth and death of standards bodies and the ideas they
cultivate. We apply the approach to the history of Web services
choreography standards, in which over 500 participants traversed nine
institutions during a 12-year period. We explain critical aspects of
this history by analyzing patterns of movement of standardization
ideas. We show that standard-making institutions refuse to legitimate
standards by utilizing bylaws which reflect the values of the
institution; these values reflect the design legacy of the Internet. We
formulate conjectures about the dynamics of the birth and death of
working groups inside larger institutions that form a population
ecology. We discuss plausible explanations for why specific Internet
standard-making efforts do not resolve quickly. The theoretical
implication of the study is that an ecological approach will apply well
to inventions that have been incubated, such as the Internet. The
pragmatic implication is that changes to institutional Internet
governance, particularly to the bylaws of standards bodies, can have
drastic and unintended effects that will reshape the standard-making
ecology.
Keywords: Standard making,
legitimacy, organizational ecology, institutionalism, Internet
standards, Web services choreography
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