Date archives "January 2010"

A collection of citations on peer to peer “selfhood”

For the full set of source references go here, where we explore the new age of relationality. * The Constellation Method of Social Change In spite of current ads and slogans, the world doesn’t change one person at a time. It changes as networks of relationships form among people who discover they share a common… Continue reading

Why carbon taxes would be better than cap and trade

Overview of the argumentation by Robert J. Shapiro: “Cap-and-trade combines a regulatory cap on greenhouse gas emissions with a market-based scheme to trade as financial instruments the “permits” to produce those emissions. For all of cap-and-trade’s initial promise as an answer to climate change, the current financial crisis has made its vulnerabilities painfully clear. The… Continue reading

Co-workers as peers: the Mondragon principles of “Sovereignty of Labor”

Now that Mondragon is expanding into the U.S., is a good time to get to know the philosophical background of the experience. Excerpts from a series on Mondragon by John McNamara: “The Mondragon principle “Sovereignty of Labor” created departure from the cooperative movement. While the Rochdale Pioneers had good intentions, they abandoned worker cooperation in… Continue reading

Bolivia and Venezuela’s Achievements after reclaiming energy resources for public benefit

Though some American press might make you believe that the two countries discussed below are on the brink of collapse, two items quoted in this post show what the policies of the new governments in Bolivia and Venezuela have been achieving by retaking public control over energy resources and applying them to the benefit of… Continue reading

Remarkable essay on the role of labor in a coming age of resource scarcity

This is very readable, stimulating essay on how the preference for mental over manual labour will influence coming social choices when fossil energy depletion becomes a problem. While I of course broadly agree with this preference, I do have a fear that the author absolutizes this preference, for example when he states that 100% of… Continue reading

Strategies for social movements after the meltdown

The fifth issue of Turbulence asks what political strategy is appropriate, when the common enemy, a successfull neoliberalism, has disappeared? The editorial asks: For many years, social movements could meet and recognise one another on the common ground of rejecting neoliberalism, society’s old middle ground – those discources and practices that defined the centre of… Continue reading

Relational technologies vs. inner technologies

Richard Carlson is starting an interesting series of inquiries, with great promise in terms of understanding peer to peer subjectivities. (as explained yesterday, the SCIY site is where original thought is really happening!) Here’s how it starts: “Bernard Stiegler whose works are also explored on this blogzine, who develops his concepts of relational technologies (R… Continue reading

The Incremental Housing Strat project and the and the Adaptive Architecture of the Slums

Another interesting commentary by Eric Hunting, originally written as a draft post for the Urban Nouveau site: “In recent years a new realization about the nature of the slum community has emerged among the rare conscientious architects who have taken a truly serious look at the contemporary slum and its social and economic dynamics. In… Continue reading

New environmental coalitions for distributed energy infrastructures

The need to transform electric generation from high carbon fossil fuels to non-carbon sources presents the opportunity to reorient electric generation from centralized to distributed systems. Such a transformation would also preserve western landscapes. But, as noted above, the Environmental Establishment is too close to the Obama Administration and too enamored of large-scale energy solutions… Continue reading

Towards an integral, p2p approach to posthuman destinies

we focus on inner technologies of self knowledge and self-governance and their co-evolution with ethical stances appropriate to the ubiquitous technological environments we increasingly populate. For me an integral approach is an approach that refuses reductionism in any form and that combines an understanding of both (inter)subjective and (inter)objective aspects of any reality (always combining… Continue reading

On the global scaling of small group dynamics in the Diagonal Economy

Simpler alternatives fail precisely because they cannot compete with the economic power of hierarchal structures—even accounting for energy descent and other factors that undercut hierarchies. From food production to manufacturing and knowledge industries, even oppressive and poorly-functioning hierarchies will out-perform isolated self-sufficiency. Jeff Vail insists, this is a crucially important point which he promises to… Continue reading