A Full-Stack Platform Architecture for Self-Organised Social Coordination
Abstract
To mitigate the restrictive centralising and monopolistic tendencies of platformisation, we aim to empower local communities by democratising platforms for self-organised social coordination. Our approach is to develop an open-source, full-stack architecture for platform development that supports ease of distribution and cloning, generativity, and a variety of hosting options. The architecture consists of a meta-platform that is used to instantiate a base platform with supporting libraries for generic functions, and plugins (intended to be supplied by third parties) for customisation of application-specification functionality for self-organised social coordination. Associated developer- and user-oriented toolchains support the instantiation and customisation of a platform in a two-stage process. This is demonstrated through the proof-of-concept implementation of two case studies: a platform for regular sporting association, and a platform for collective group study. We conclude by arguing that self-organisation at the application layer can be achieved by the specific supporting functionality of a full-stack architecture with complimentary developer and user toolchains.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2507.01239,
title = {A Full-Stack Platform Architecture for Self-Organised Social Coordination},
author = {Matthew Scott and Jeremy Pitt},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2507.01239},
year = {2025}
}
Comments
10 pages, 10 figures, 2 tables