I think cooperation is more complex than that, as far as who benefits. Superficially, yes it benefits lower status participants the most and therefore suggests they’re the ones most likely to ask. In very simple systems, I think you see this often. But as the system or cultural superstructure gets more complex, the benefit rises toward higher status participants. Most societies put a lot of stock in being able to organize—a task which includes cooperation in its scope. That’s a small part of the reason you get political email spam asking for donations, even if you live in an area where your political party is clearly dominant. Societies also tend to put an emphasis on active overall participation (the ‘irons in the fire’ mentality), where peer-cooperation is rewarded, and it’s often unclear who has higher status in those situations without being able to tell who has the most ‘irons in the fire’ so to speak. I feel like this is where coauthoring falls. Although it probably depends on what subculture has developed around the subject being authored.
And then there’s the people who create organizations entirely centered around cooperation. The idea being that there’s power in being able to set the rules of how the lower status participants are allowed to cooperate, and how they are rewarded for their cooperation. For example, Youtube and Kickstarter. In these and similar systems, cooperation effectively starts at the highest possible status and rolls downhill.
I think cooperation is more complex than that, as far as who benefits. Superficially, yes it benefits lower status participants the most and therefore suggests they’re the ones most likely to ask. In very simple systems, I think you see this often. But as the system or cultural superstructure gets more complex, the benefit rises toward higher status participants. Most societies put a lot of stock in being able to organize—a task which includes cooperation in its scope. That’s a small part of the reason you get political email spam asking for donations, even if you live in an area where your political party is clearly dominant. Societies also tend to put an emphasis on active overall participation (the ‘irons in the fire’ mentality), where peer-cooperation is rewarded, and it’s often unclear who has higher status in those situations without being able to tell who has the most ‘irons in the fire’ so to speak. I feel like this is where coauthoring falls. Although it probably depends on what subculture has developed around the subject being authored.
And then there’s the people who create organizations entirely centered around cooperation. The idea being that there’s power in being able to set the rules of how the lower status participants are allowed to cooperate, and how they are rewarded for their cooperation. For example, Youtube and Kickstarter. In these and similar systems, cooperation effectively starts at the highest possible status and rolls downhill.