Date archives "April 2008"

Collaboration Around Local Food Systems

Right now, over 100 people in Ohio, USA are carrying out an experiment to collaborate around creating and evolving local food systems infrastructure at http://socialsynergyweb.org/oardc/ This is a collaboration between myself, Steve Bosserman, Casey Hoy, and of course, all of the diverse people participating at the site. The participants met at a summit at the… Continue reading

Book of the Week: Axel Bruns on Produsage (4): Produsaging politics?

In our last installment of Axel Bruns recommended book, he asks: what are the political consequences and potentialities of the produsage of politics? Excerpt: “A crucial step in the advance towards a more participatory, active, monitorial form of citizenship is the embedding of such practices into everyday life, and blogging and other forms of participation… Continue reading

Book of the Week: Axel Bruns on Produsage (3): How dangerous is commercial enclosure?

Axel Bruns asks: how safe are the achievements of participatory produsage from commercial enclosure? Third excerpt (without notes and references) from his book: Axel Bruns. Blogs, Wikipedia, Second Life, and Beyond: From Production to Produsage. New York: Peter Lang, 2008. Excerpt: “The emergence of produsage itself can be seen simply as a symptom of a… Continue reading

Book of the Week: Axel Bruns on Produsage (2): Experts and Amateurs?

We continue our publication of excerpts on Axel Bruns remarkable book about the produsage revolution. Today, the end of the era of experts. Axel Bruns: Wikipedia, and the environments of produsage more generally, can serve as vehicles for moves beyond established and increasingly ossified structures of knowledge and expertise; they pay respect not to abstract… Continue reading

Book of the Week: Axel Bruns on Produsage (1): the transformation of the industrial value chain

Axel Bruns. Blogs, Wikipedia, Second Life, and Beyond: From Production to Produsage. New York: Peter Lang, 2008. We reviewed this remarkable book very positively before, but we would like to present it as book of the week as well, by reproducing some of the more stimulating excerpts. (Excerpts without the notes and illustratrions in the… Continue reading

A must read on the bankruptcy of neoclassical economics

Thanks to Robert Nadeau, who published this editorial in Scientific American. It’s a superb summary of the intellectual bankruptcy of mainstream economics and why it is so dangerous for the very survival of the bankruptcy. Robert Nadeau: “the mathematical theories used by mainstream economists are predicated on the following unscientific assumptions: * The market system… Continue reading

What kind of business can survive web evolution?

Yihong Ding makes an interesting contribution to business strategy at the Semantic Report magazine, which I recommend reading in full. Here is the main argument: What is the most fundamental reason that drives normal people contributing to the Web? And my answer: People contribute to the Web so that they can be recognized at present… Continue reading

Interview on Peer to Peer Politics with Cosma Orsi

Here’s the text of an interview (of Michel Bauwens) in preparation of a trip to Italy in May 2008. Interviewer is Cosma Orsi. Q: Your recent reflections gravitates around an alternative paradigm of production that you have named P2P political economy. What is this concept all about? Michel Bauwens: My main argument is that we… Continue reading

The principle of subsidiarity and the primacy of civil society

This post aims to create more background to our recent discussion on peer to peer and the state. It explains the principle of subsidiarity, which expresses the primacy of civil society, and is part of the social doctrine of the Catholic Church. Excerpts (from the Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church):: ““a. Value… Continue reading