Date archives "April 2018"

Disrupting the disruptors: The collaborative economy changes direction

In 2018, collaborative economy workers will start truly collaborative organisations to disrupt the marketplace once again, say Alice Casey and Peter Baeck (originally published on Nesta.org.uk). Alice Casey and Peter Baeck: 2016 was the year the collaborative economy established itself as the big disruptor of everything, how we travel, shop and manage our money; 2017… Continue reading

How a rural community built South Africa’s first ISP owned and run by a cooperative

This article, written by Bill Tucker, of the University of the Western Cape was originally published on The Conversation. Bill Tucker: Mankosi is a remote rural community in South Africa’s Eastern Cape province. It is home to almost 6,000 people. The nearest city is Mthatha, about 60 kilometres away, as a bird flies. Most homes are not connected… Continue reading

A call for intergalactic solidarity actions everywhere to end the destruction of the ZAD

The P2P Foundation stands in solidarity with the Commoners resisting by the enclosure of the ZAD. This was forwarded to us by Oliver Ressler, who writes: The ZAD – Europe’s largest autonomous territory that emerged from the struggle against a new airport for Nantes in France – is in danger of being evicted by 2500… Continue reading

Censorship machines are coming: It’s time for the free software community to discover its political clout

Continuing our coverage of the European Parliament’s heinous proposition for filtering uploaded content, Julia Reda writes about the disturbing consequences it could have for FLOSS projects. Julia Reda: Free software development as we know it is under threat by the EU copyright reform plans. The battle on the EU copyright reform proposal continues, centering on the plan to… Continue reading

Sharon Ede on “Cosmo-localisation” in the New Economy

Karun Cowper speaks with urbanist, activist and “Audacities” initiator Sharon Ede on “cosmo-localisation” in the New Economy in Australia and beyond. About Sharon Ede Sharon is an urbanist and activist who works to build the sharing/collaborative movement in Australia and beyond. In 2017, she established AUDAcities, a catalyst for relocalising production of food, energy and fabrication in cities,… Continue reading

People in defence of life and territory: Counter-power and self-defence in Latin America

Every year, TNI publishes a State of the Power report, which this time has the central theme of building ‘counter-power’. This volume contains many gems; every article brings new material about the evolution of social movements, with special attention this year to the commons as an expression and experience of counter-power (see the article on… Continue reading

Texting Cows, AGTech & the Future of Farming in Germany

Automation and digitisation are rising in farming and the broader agri-food sector. Germany – industrial powerhouse of Europe –  seems an obvious place to embrace AGTech. From precision farming and data ownership to embodied energy and cost, what are the opportunities, the impacts and the implications? And how are agroecologists responding? Helene Schulze: When the body… Continue reading

New research explores a sharing economy based on ‘cooperation, solidarity, and support’

Cross-posted from Shareable. Darren Sharp: Commercial sharing platforms like Uber and Airbnb have reshaped the transportation and housing sectors in cities and raised challenges for urban policy makers seeking to balance market disruption with community protections. Transformational sharing projects like Shareable’s Sharing Cities Network seek to strengthen the urban commons to address social justice, equity,… Continue reading

‘The Third Industrial Revolution’ explores how sharing creates a sustainable world

Cross-posted from Shareable. Ruby Irene Pratka: Call it “An Inconvenient Truth” for the market economy. In “The Third Industrial Revolution,” American economic and social theorist, business school professor, and policy adviser Jeremy Rifkin lays out a bleak vision of a near-future world devastated by climate change, mass extinctions, slow economic growth, and rising levels of extremism and inequality…. Continue reading

New Ecological Economics: Superorganism and Ultrasociality

This is a fascinating and probing interview. It will provoke deep reflection on the questions of economic growth, the over-simplistic way we advocate for the transition to renewables, the incredible challenges to change systems …. the list goes on. No answers here and no promise of certainty for the outcome for human evolution. Nevertheless, it… Continue reading

Patterns of Commoning: How I Have Been Conducting Research on the Commons for Thirty Years Without Knowing It

What Blocked My View of the Commons Étienne Le Roy: Writing about commons as a member of a scientific community, which itself has developed only recently, has raised a number of problems for me. First, there is the time lag with which the complex problem of the commons gained our attention in the first place. Why… Continue reading

How Corporate Organizations Translate Climate Change into Business as Usual

How much faith can we place in corporations to save us from climate change? The following is extracted from An Inconvenient Truth: How Organizations Translate Climate Change into Business as Usual, by Christopher Wright and Daniel Nyberg and Why corporate promises to cut carbon can’t be trusted by the same authors. Abstract “Climate change represents… Continue reading

A Digital Map Leads to Reparations for Black and Indigenous Farmers

The map’s creators say they envision an equitable distribution of land and resources in the country. According to the nonprofit Urban Institute, the wealth of White families was seven times greater than that of Black families in 2016. The following article was written by Jean Willoughby and originally published by YES! magazine Jean Willoughby: Last month, Dallas… Continue reading

Better Technology Isn’t The Solution To Ecological Collapse

Jason Hickel: It’s hard to ignore the headlines these days, with all their warnings about ecological breakdown. Last year brought troubling news on everything from plastic pollution to soil depletion to the collapse of insect populations. These crises are worsening as our demands on the Earth intensify. Right now, virtually every government in the world is committed to pursuing economic growth:… Continue reading

An Internet of ownership: democratic design for the online economy

The following article was published in The Sociological Review 66, no. 2 (March 2018). Updated 2018.02.05. The disappointments of the online economy – for instance, user surveillance and systemic labor abuses – stem at least in part from its failures to meaningfully share ownership and governance with relevant stakeholders. Under the banner of ‘platform cooperativism’,… Continue reading

Radical Municipalism: Fearless Cities

Jenny Gellatly and Marcos Rivero: Fear and uncertainty seem to have settled into our societies, not only among citizens, but also political leaders and transnational corporations who see their capitals and centres of power stagger in the face of the combined effects of slowing global economic growth, imminent energy decline and increasing climate chaos. In… Continue reading