Design Principles for Digital Community Currencies

Chasin F., Schmolke F., Becker J.

Research article in digital collection (conference) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

Community currencies are alternative currencies, which enable the mobilization of local resources for local needs and building resilient communities. They allow community members to perform economic transactions like buying products and paying for services using an alternative currency as a medium of exchange. For decades, regional, paper-based community currencies have been in use across the world. With the advent of the digital age, community currencies are increasingly moving into the digital space. Digital Community Currencies (DCCs) create opportunities for addressing challenges that traditional community currencies are facing, such as the inconvenience of handling two currencies in one wallet and the geographic limitation to a limited user population. This research builds upon characteristics and challenges of community currencies and derives six design principles from a literature review, an analysis of 16 community currency projects and an interview with a community currency project manager at the end of the project’s life. The design principles serve as a basis for establishing resilient and scalable DCCs. They contribute to the limited IS research on phenomena of social sustainability and have major practical implications when implemented in existing community currency systems.

Details about the publication

Name of the repositoryAIS eLibrary
StatusPublished
Release year2020
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
Conference53rd Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, Maui, United States
Link to the full texthttps://hdl.handle.net/10125/64246
KeywordsDigital Community; Community Currencies; Digital Money

Authors from the University of Münster

Becker, Jörg
European Research Center for Information Systems (ERCIS)
Chasin, Friedrich
Chair of Information Systems and Information Management (IS)
Schmolke, Florian
Chair of Information Systems and Information Management (IS)