Date archives "July 2013"

P2P urbanism project: Revitalizing urban public space using open source technologies

A future research project of P2P Lab with a focus on P2P urbanism. If anyone would like to participate or co-operate, he/she may contact project’s co-ordinator Vasilis Niaros. In a nutshell, the *tentative* research framewok: Introduction An essential component of the sustainability of cities is “public space” for numerous political, social and economic reasons (see… Continue reading

A proposal to consider Public Employment as a Civic Common Pool

Excerpted from Danilo D’Antonio: “In the common interest, let me report that the democratization process, begun long time ago with the introduction of the elections, with the advent of our Republics should had be extended also to the Public Employment. The public roles are not just jobs but always hold a certain amount of public… Continue reading

Using the concept of the social commons to rethink the welfare state

Republished from Francine Mestrum (Global Social Justice): “Why do we use this concept and what do we mean by it? Firstly, the term ‘social commons’ is meant to be analogous with the protection of the so-called ecological ‘commons’. Defending ‘the commons’ means focusing on that which is shared by all human beings. It is the… Continue reading

The Commonification of public services as part of the new commons-based development model

Excerpted from Tommaso Fattori: “The commonification of public services is part of an overall paradigm shift: it contributes to building a new commons-based development model, which changes social relations, man-nature relations and finally the relations between current and future generations. Commoning incorporates future generations because it implies long-term “care” and “stewardship” of the world’s joint… Continue reading

Michel Bauwens responds to Nadia El-Imam’s open letter after the Ouishare Fest

A few weeks ago, Nadia El Imam addressed an open letter to me that was a response to the closing keynote at the OuishareFest in May 2013, where I presented a four-quadrant interpretation of the emerging collaborative economy, with four different value-laden models vying for supremacy but also already co-existing in the present. Nadia’s editorial… Continue reading

Mumbai’s Homegrown Cities Project: upgrade the slums, don’t destroy them!

Matias Echanove and Rahul Srivastava URBZ/Urbanology, Mumbai Bhandup is a hill-side neighborhood. In the distance we can see the presence of high-rise buildings. Some of them are up-market others are cheaply built “slum rehabilitation schemes”. Like John F.C. Turner, the British born architect who in the 1970s and 1980s influenced some of the World Bank’s… Continue reading

Essay of the Day: Contextualizing Boycotts and Buycotts

* Article: Contextualizing Boycotts and Buycotts: The Impure Politics of Consumer-Based Advocacy in an Age of Global Ecological Crises. by Phaedra Pezzullo. From the abstract: “”This essay shows how, more than mere economic objects that can be bought and sold in a free market of capitalism, commodities can serve as contingent nodal points circulating through… Continue reading

Terje Bongard’s Democratic Ingroup Model as specific form of p2p democracy?

The description comes from an appeal for collaboration related to a Norwegian research project, and looks very promising: Terje Bongard: “Analyzing and testing a sustainable ingroup democracy, including the money value analysis, and how a change to such a democracy may come by. Our hypothesis is that the democracy model represents a political system that… Continue reading

Should we rely on Technology Fixes or the Intelligence of Nature?

None of our fixes can control the pain, grief and rage we feel as we gaze out upon what we have wrought. Environmentalists and concerned citizens are increasingly beginning to recognize the delusion of the ‘technological fix’ – the use of technology to remedy problems caused by previous technology. Republished from Charles Eistenstein, who proposes… Continue reading

Essay of the Day: For a Democratic Cosmopolitan Movement

How should we define the difference between the current world and previous worlds? – How should we define the political format that will facilitate world governance? – How should we define the movement that would provide a democratic check on world governance? * Essay: For a Democratic Cosmopolitarian Movement. Jean Rossiaud. World Governance.org, 2013 From… Continue reading