Date archives "January 2013"

Greek Commons Activists Aim to Protect Their Water From Privatization

Republished from On The Commons, by Daniel Moss: (original has links) “Greece knows a thing or two about democracy. And as an increasingly arid nation, good water management is fundamental to its future, both political and physical. The recent financial crisis hasn’t only tested Greek democracy, but its water as well. “You can tell if… Continue reading

Protecting Marine Diversity Through Local Fisheries and Ocean Commons

Profile and interview with Niaz Dorry on her work on the marine commons. Jessica Conrad in On The Commons: “Based in Gloucester, MA, the oldest settled fishing port in the U.S., local fisheries champion Niaz Dorry finds herself in a hotbed of resource management issues: while she and a growing community of fishermen consider themselves… Continue reading

Video of the Day: Shift Change, the re-emerging world of cooperative work

“Shift Change, a new movie from filmmakers Melissa Young and Mark Dworkin, looks at the world of worker cooperatives, where reasonable salaries, job security, and general work satisfaction prevail.” Watch the video here: SHIFT CHANGE – preview from Mark Dworkin on Vimeo. The following is excerpted from a interview of Melissa Young conducted by Ariel… Continue reading

Four Internet Historiographical Ideologies

Dale Carrico alerted me to this important essay: “Adam Fish helpfully summarizes libertechian, technoprogressive, Great Man, and peer-to-peer narratives of the creation of the internet.” Adam Fish indeed discusses the issue and an ongoing debate in the U.S. about ‘who’ created the internet. The different theories reflect different political ideologies he concludes. In the two… Continue reading

Why Apache defeated the GPL license: developer freedom vs. user freedom

Interesting thesis from Matt Asay in the excellent last issue of TIM Review which is devoted to Open Source Sustainability: Matt Asay: “In 2008, I firmly believed that open source was dangerously veering toward an unsustainable state. After all, enterprise adoption of open-source software was booming as the global economy tanked, but the same companies… Continue reading

Video of the Day: Jamie Drummond on Crowdsourcing the Millenium Goals

‘In 2000, the UN laid out 8 goals to make the world better by reducing poverty and disease — with a deadline of 2015. As that deadline approaches, Jamie Drummond of ONE.org runs down the surprising successes of the 8 Millennium Development Goals, and suggests a crowdsourced reboot for the next 15 years.” Watch the… Continue reading

A Revival of the “Hima”, the Islamic Tradition of the Commons

The prophet of the Islamic world sought to preserve special landscapes for everyone. Today, Muslim environmentalists are trying to reinvigorate this tradition. Excerpted from Jay Walljasper: “There was an ancient Middle Eastern tradition of setting aside certain lands, called hima (“protected place” in Arabic), for the enjoyment of local chieftains. Muhammed “transformed the hima from… Continue reading

Deep Democracy, Peer-to-Peer Production and Our Common Futures

* Paper: Deep democracy, peer-to-peer production and our common futures. Jose Ramos. Futura, 2012. Jose Ramos presents his new essay on the future of democracy in a p2p context: “Earlier this year Dr. Vuokko Jarva, a futures scholar who works on consumer education to promote future consciousness and planetary responsibility and is developing new narrative… Continue reading

The future of Greece lies in the rise of a new civil society

Excerpted from a longer article by Yannis Theocharis . The full and original article has many links to p2p and civil society initiatives, and a longer discussion on the vital role of trust bonds. Yannis Theocharis: “A light breeze of transformation seems to have started blowing silently in Greece. The younger generation has inspired a… Continue reading

Strategizing the commons (5): Some conclusions about the relations between Commons and Movements

* Article: Massimo de Angelis, Crises, Movements and Commons. Borderlands e-journal, VOLUME 11 NUMBER 2, 2012. Massimo de Angelis has written an interesting essay on how to correlate the growth and re-emergence of the commons, with the rythms of the rise and fall of social and political movements, with a view on the transformation of… Continue reading

Book of the Day: Open Field

“an absorbing collection from many authors exploring issues of the arts, the commons, public space and community co-creation, which is especially about the relationship between commons and museums, and the complications of institutional forays into social practice.” * Book: Open Field: Conversations on the Commons. Edited by Sarah Schultz and Sarah Peters. Contributions by Susannah… Continue reading

Why Degrowth is Factually Realistic and Can (Has) Produce(d) More Human Happiness

degrowth is a call for a radical break from traditional growth-based models of society, no matter if these models are “left” or “right”, to invent new ways of living together in a true democracy, respectful of the values of equality and freedom, based on sharing and cooperation, and with sufficiently moderate consumption so as to… Continue reading