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The paper reflects on the EULiST Seminarcheck, an advisory service to open-up courses to partner universities within a university alliance through freely licensed materials. Using an exemplary advisory process, it shows how a course can function within the alliance as a Boundary Object and thus enable bottom-up cooperation in higher education teaching. The reflection offers "lessons learned" and theoretical food for thought. It is argued that the process, as a Boundary Object, successfully navigates the tension between standardization and interpretive flexibility in the alliance, and that the necessary boundary work by teaching staff requires time, know-how, and resources.

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