Date archives "March 2016"

The Momentum behind the Jeremy Corbyn movement

“In the UK and other countries ravaged by unfettered capitalism, there are many signs of a new kind of resistance. Typically this involves mobilizing all possible sources of counter-power — economic, social, cultural — and different levels of political power, local as well as national and, very occasionally, continental. In particular, these efforts don’t just… Continue reading

FairMarket Is Here

The FairCoop team is pleased to announce that the FairMarket has now officially entered its beta phase, which means that it is fully functional as a market, and we invite interested individuals and organisations to come and test it out, either as sellers or buyers or both. To give some background on the project for… Continue reading

The first three steps towards “making community” in your surroundings

Do you want to “make community” in your surroundings? The first three steps are simple… but have surprising results. Listening is always the most important thing in a conversation. This is true to such an extent that the result of an online discussion can be predicted by the rhythm and the shape of the message… Continue reading

Podcast: Jose Ramos and Karl Fitzgerald on the Culture of the Commons Economy

Jose Ramos and Karl Fitzgerald discuss the fast moving commons culture that is evolving through systems thinking, peer-to-peer and the sharing economy. They focus on the City as a Commons as an emerging social project, and Karl gives a precis of the top peer-to-peer trends of the moment according to Michel Bauwens. This was originally… Continue reading

More Commoning – perspectives on conviviality

Members of the Commons Institut (Germany) contribute to the debate around the Convivialist Manifesto and on Mother’s Day offer a new approach to reproduction. We see ourselves as commoners. Therefore we welcome the initiative by the Convivialist Manifesto authors to bring together diverse persons and organisations, positions and discourses in a shared process. This will… Continue reading

Biophilia and Healing Environments: Healthy Principles For Designing the Built World

A new free e-book by the famous urbanist Nikos A. Salingaros. From the introduction: Our biology should dictate the design of the physical settings we inhabit. As human beings, we need to connect with living structures in our environment. Designers thus face the task of better incorporating healing strategies into their work, using factors that… Continue reading

Worker ownership and cooperatives will not succeed by competing on capitalism’s terms

A critique of the ideas of U.S. cooperative leaders such as Richard Wolff and Gar Alperovitz: Excerpted from Sam Gindin: “If state ownership is rejected as a proxy for the commons and if ownership in worker-controlled enterprises is in the hands of the workers, then these groups of workers essentially become their own capitalists. They… Continue reading

The Importance of Care and Affections in our Communities: Copylove and the Invisible Commons

Copylove started in 2011 as a local informal network for investigations into commons and feminist practices. Later, it turned into a public and open investigation via www.copylove.cc (only in Spanish) led by Sofía Coca (ZEMOS98, Sevilla), Txelu Balboa (COLABORABORA, Euskadi) and Rubén Martínez (Fundación de los Comunes, Barcelona) in which we tried to extract, from… Continue reading

Think Global, Print Local: A New Commons-Based Publishing Model

Some enterprising commoners in Spain and Latinamerica have launched an imaginative crowdfunding campaign to translate and publish my book Think Like a Commoner in Spanish.  What makes this publishing initiative so distinctive is its ambition to build a new transnational publishing network that is commons-oriented in content as well as practice.  They call it “Think… Continue reading

Transmediale 2016: Necessary Conversations Off-the-Cloud

Introduction. I arrived at the Transmediale festival late Friday afternoon, which was hosted as usual at Das Haus der Kulturen der Welt (The House of World Cultures) in Berlin. The area where the building is sited was destroyed during World War II, and then at the height of the Cold War, it was given as… Continue reading

Pixelache Festival 2016: ‘Interfaces for Empathy’

Originally published at Pixelache.ac: Pixelache Festival 2016 will happen again in September. The festival, named ‘Interfaces for Empathy’ explores possibilities of the societal shift towards the understanding and consciousness of human species as a balanced part of the ecosystem we live at. The profound technological changes are increasingly challenging the classical conception of perception and… Continue reading

Arthur Brock on the Blockchain’s Major Design Flaw

Systems will never scale if you require global consensus for local actions by independent agents. For example, I should not have to know where every dollar in the economy is when I want to buy something from you. Excerpted from Arthur Brock: “Stop the Nonsensus! (Nonsense Consensus): Systems will never scale if you require global… Continue reading

Douglas Rushkoff’s vision for a new, better world

“The moment we stop optimizing the digital economy for the growth of capital, and optimize it for the circulation of value between people, everything will start to get better really fast.” Another eye-opening interview with our friend Douglas Rushkoff. This one was conducted by Jesse Hicks and originally published at The Kernell. For more than… Continue reading

When are Crimes Against Humanity “Arcane References”?

According to Politico (Michael Crowley, “Sanders once urged abolishing CIA,” Feb. 22), in a debate with Hillary Clinton, Bernie Sanders “befuddled some viewers with an arcane reference to a 1953 U.S.-backed coup in Iran, which Sanders called an example of America’s history of ‘overthrowing governments.’” The fact that a mainstream liberal publication refers to the… Continue reading