Date archives "February 2013"

A new path for academic research: open value networks with local economies

A proposal from Tiberius Brastaviceanu: “While the higher administrative layers of Universities are still pushing for commercializing intellectual property, we (SENSORICA) find through our practice that scientists are more and more inclined to open their innovation, and to integrate “value networks” that bridge the academia with the local economy. SENSORICA value network already includes 2… Continue reading

The Transparency Delusion endangers really existing democracy

Is the citizen with the smartphone the one who can restore our trust in democracy and democratic institutions? I am sceptical. Smartphones may make it easier for us to control our politicians, but trust refers to the confidence in the operation of institutions that people cannot directly monitor and control. We don’t trust our families… Continue reading

P2P Debates: Arguments for and against central planning

(please note that my own approach, called P2P Theory, accepts both elements of markets and planning, but advocates massive mutual coordination through stigmergy as the new core of economics; and that this can be achieved through open book accounting and open supply chains as practiced by commons-friendly, commons-dependent, and commons-creating enterpreneurial coalitions that are owned… Continue reading

Essay of the Day: Stafford Beer’s Designing Freedom

* A classic text, well worth rereading: Designing Freedom. Stafford Beer. Stafford Beer wrote: “all these institutions we have been contemplating — the homes, the of?ces, the schools, the cities, the ?rms, the states, the countries—are not just things, entities we recognize and label. Theyare instead dynamic and surviving systems. Well, I did say it… Continue reading

A critique of the Rolling Jubilee strategy

The 99% cannot bail out the 99%, as both ‘bailouts’ and ‘the 99%’ are questionable strategic notions. For this reason, I am skeptical of the Rolling Jubilee. Excerpted from Matthijs Krul: “A quick comment may be appropriate on the subject of the so-called ‘rolling Jubilee’, a programme initiated by an organization calling itself Strike Debt…. Continue reading

What Contribution Do Foxconn Workers Make to Apple’s and Dell’s Profits?

The “GDP Illusion” is a fault in perception caused by defects in the construction and interpretation of standard economic data. Its main symptom is a systematic underestimation of the real contribution of low-wage workers in the global South to global wealth, and a corresponding exaggerated measure of the domestic product of the United States and… Continue reading

No real commons economics at the Mercator Research Institute for Global Commons

A critique excerpted from David Bollier: “After listening to the four speakers at the MCC’s inaugural one-day conference on November 15, “The Green Growth Dilemma,” the institute seems poised to explore modest, socially minded twists to the standard economic narrative. In other words, a fairly tame, meliorist agenda within the crumbling edifice of neoclassical economic… Continue reading

P2P Debates: Arguments for and against “market socialism”

(please note that my own approach, called P2P Theory, accepts both elements of markets and planning, but advocates massive mutual coordination through stigmergy as the new core of economics; and that this can be achieved through open book accounting and open supply chains as practiced by commons-friendly, commons-dependent, and commons-creating enterpreneurial coalitions that are owned… Continue reading

Essay of the Day: The Future of the Commons Beyond Market Failure and Government Regulation

* Publication: The Future of the Commons – Beyond Market Failure and Government Regulation. By Elinor Ostrom et al. , Institute for Economic Affairs, 2012 Here is the Executive summary: Traditional economic models of how to manage environmental problems relating to renewable natural resources, such as fisheries, have tended to recommend either government regulation or… Continue reading

LabourStart’s Online Campaigning Story

LabourStart has 15 years of experience running online campaigns in partnership with trade unions around the world. This new book serves as an introduction to LabourStart’s campaigning work, and brings together some of our success stories. Campaigning Online and Winning:  How LabourtStart’s ActNOW Campaigns Are Making Unions Stronger Authored by Eric Lee, Edd Mustill  

Four Arguments on Sacred Economics

A summary of the main proposals in Charles Eistenstein’s book, Sacred Economics. Excerpted from Devin Martin: ” I would like to offer a brief summary and commentary on four key ideas contained in his work. I highly recommend you investigate further. Whether or not one agrees with Eisenstein’s ideas is second to the fact that… Continue reading