paylaarak
Paylaarak is a theoretical construct in the study of decentralized governance and cooperative economics. It describes a resource-sharing framework in which value generated by a group—monetary or non-monetary—is redistributed to participants according to transparent contribution metrics, need, and agreed-upon rules. The model emphasizes participatory decision-making and accountability, rather than centralized allocation.
The term was coined in speculative essays on decentralized governance published in 2020 by proponents of the
Implementation typically relies on pooling resources, transparent ledgers, and contribution scoring, with distributions managed by rules
Applications include open-source funding models, mutual-aid networks, distributed worker cooperatives, and simulations in economic design. It
Critics point to challenges such as measuring contribution, susceptibility to gaming, overhead costs, and regulatory ambiguity.
See also: cooperative economics, digital commons, platform cooperativism, blockchain governance.