Commons Transition Plan – P2P Foundation https://blog.p2pfoundation.net Researching, documenting and promoting peer to peer practices Tue, 01 Dec 2015 14:49:44 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.5.15 62076519 Commons Transition Plan Discussion https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/commons-transition-plan-discussion/2015/12/02 https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/commons-transition-plan-discussion/2015/12/02#respond Wed, 02 Dec 2015 11:42:17 +0000 http://blog.p2pfoundation.net/?p=52954 Join our friends from the Chicago Chamber of the Commons to discuss our Commons Transition plans. See below for event details or click here.   Our commons are critical to our sustainability as a world and the basis for both existing and new economies. We want to educate ourselves and each other about them. Please... Continue reading

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Commons Trans Strip

Join our friends from the Chicago Chamber of the Commons to discuss our Commons Transition plans. See below for event details or click here.


 

Our commons are critical to our sustainability as a world and the basis for both existing and new economies. We want to educate ourselves and each other about them. Please join us for a discussion on the Commons Transition Plan from CommonsTransition.org.  You can download the free ebook or read it online before you come. We will focus on the actual plan, which is covered in the first 100 pages of the 200 page document.

We plan to open Chicago’s first Chamber of Commons, for more information click here.  We’re hosting this discussion to start the conversations about Commons around the Chicago area.

When

Where

Sulzer Regional Library, Chicago Public Library – 4455 North Lincoln Avenue Chicago, IL 60625 – View Map

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The Newly Launched Commons Transition Plan https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/the-newly-launched-commons-transition-plan/2015/02/15 https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/the-newly-launched-commons-transition-plan/2015/02/15#respond Sun, 15 Feb 2015 20:00:13 +0000 http://blog.p2pfoundation.net/?p=48503 The P2P Foundation recently launched a new website, the Commons Transition Platform,  as a central repository for policy ideas that help promote a wide variety of commons and peer-to-peer dynamics.  The site represents a new, more coordinated stage of activism in this area – collecting practical policy proposals for legally authorizing and encouraging the creation... Continue reading

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Commons Transition

The P2P Foundation recently launched a new website, the Commons Transition Platform,  as a central repository for policy ideas that help promote a wide variety of commons and peer-to-peer dynamics.  The site represents a new, more coordinated stage of activism in this area – collecting practical policy proposals for legally authorizing and encouraging the creation of new commons.

The website is a database of “practical experiences and policy proposals aimed toward achieving a more humane and environmentally grounded mode of societal organization.”  The idea is to begin to outline how policies could bring about and support a commons-based civil society, with a special focus on how collaborative stewardship of shared resources can be achieved.

The P2P Foundation has stated its aspirations for the new initiative this way:

With the Commons Transition Plan as a comparative document, we intend to organize workshops and dialogues to see how other commons locales, countries, language-communities but also cities and regions, can translate their experiences, needs and demands into policy proposals. The Plan is not an imposition nor is it a prescription, but something that is intended as a stimulus for discussion and independent crafting of more specific commons-oriented policy proposals that respond to the realities and exigencies of different contexts and locales. This project therefore, is itself a commons, open to all contributions, and intended for the benefit of all who need it.

The Commons Transition Platform currently features three main policy documents, each originally created for Ecuador’s groundbreaking FLOK Society Project.  The FLOK Project (Free Libre Open Knowledge) produced a comprehensive set of policy proposals for encouraging knowledge commons and peer production.  These documents – written by Michel Bauwens, John Restakis and George Dafermos – have been newly revised and updated in non-region-specific versions.

In announcing the new website, Michel Bauwens said, “We share [these proposals] in order to provide an overview of the many precedents and possibilities pointing toward a fairer societal order, and to inspire civil society collectives at the local, regional, national and global levels to adapt them to their particular contexts.”

The original FLOK Society proposals are already being adapted by the Catalan Integral Cooperative (CIC) in Catalunya.  The FLOK project differed in that it was a state-sponsored study while CIC pursuing its proposals as a completely pre-figurative, stateless initiative.  The Commons Transition Plan website plans to track the ongoing developments of both projects.

The Commons Transition Plan will also highlight useful projects by other transnational, commons-oriented collectives such as Share the World’s Resources, the Post Growth Institute, and the Sustainable Economies Law Center – all showcased in the Related Projects section of the website.

Other highlights include a FAQ on Commons Transition, a News and Articles section with exclusive interviews, and a Wiki entirely dedicated to commons-oriented policy proposals and transition-oriented projects.

What Is a “Commons Transition”?

Bauwens often makes the case for a commons transition from what he calls “netarchical capitalism,” which is based on capitalist exploitation of social cooperation, to a system that lets creators themselves capture the value that they create.

Netarchical capitalism, writes Bauwens, is “an evolution from a type of capitalism that was based on the extraction of rent through the privatization of knowledge and the control of intellectual property and supply networks (cognitive capitalism), to a new form of ‘netarchical capitalism’ in which proprietary platforms both enable human co-operation but also exploit it for the benefit of private capital.”  Nowadays, he writes, “the whole of society is being transformed into a ‘social factory’ producing commons-generated goods and services. The cases of uncompensated user-generated value for Facebook and Google are obvious examples.

In an explanation for the need for a Commons Transition Plan, Bauwens and his colleague John Restakis write:

The failure of netarchical capitalism to return fair value to its creators has transposed the traditional exploitation of labor in the production of material goods to that of immaterial goods such as knowledge, branding, and ideas that are now the driving force of capital accumulation. This has greatly increased the precariousness of both workers and commoners the world over. Hence, any transition must also solve and restore the feedback loop between value creation and distribution, and create an ethical and civic economy around the commons, moving from extractive forms of exploitative capital, to generative forms of co-operative capital. In other words, capital that returns value to those that contribute to the commons.

This process requires the re-conception and re-alignment both of traditional commons and co-operative thinking, and practice, into new institutional forms that prefigure a new political economy of co-operative commonwealth. This in turn, is based on a simultaneous transition of civil society, the market, and the organization and role of the state and forms a foundation principle of the Commons Transition Plan.

For most of the history of industrial and post-industrial capitalism, the primary political conflict has been one between state and market – whether to use the state power for redistribution of wealth and regulation of the excesses of the market, or to allow market players to privatize the value of public and social goods and services for the benefit of capital. This is the classic conflict between social versus private benefit and has been called by some the lib (for liberal) vs. lab (for labor and its derivative social movements) pendulum. In our current political economy, except for a few researchers who operated outside of the mainstream, such as Elinor Ostrom and her research on the commons, the focus on social value and the common good has been discarded as a historical legacy without future. Indeed, the remaining physical commons that exist globally, mostly in the South, are everywhere under threat while under austerity, what remains of public goods in Europe and North America are also being privatized at breakneck speeds.

But the emergence of digital knowledge, software and design, as new forms of commons not only recreate commons-oriented modes of production and market activities, they also show that value is now increasingly created through contributions, not traditional labor, to create commons, not commodities. Through its contributions and the ubiquity of digital technology, it can be said that civil society has now become productive in its own right, and we can make a leap from contributor communities of software developers to a vision of civil society that consists of civil commons contributed to by citizens.

The entrepreneurial activities that are created around the commons induce the vision of an ethical economy, a non-capitalist marketplace that re-introduces reciprocity and co-operation in the market’s functioning, while co-creating commons and creating livelihoods for the commoners. This type of economy and market in which co-operation, mutuality, and the common good define the characteristics of a new kind of political economy, point the way to a new state form, which we have called the Partner State.

Thus, the commons not only introduces a third term next to the state and the market, i.e. the generative, commons-producing civil society, but also a new market and a new state. A foundation principle of a Commons Transition Plan is that the changes must happen concurrently in all three aspects of our social and economic life.

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Towards a first stateless commons transition plan: a partnership of P2P-F with the Catalan Integral Cooperative https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/towards-a-first-stateless-commons-transition-plan-a-partnership-of-p2p-f-with-the-catalan-integral-cooperative/2014/08/06 https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/towards-a-first-stateless-commons-transition-plan-a-partnership-of-p2p-f-with-the-catalan-integral-cooperative/2014/08/06#respond Tue, 05 Aug 2014 23:32:48 +0000 http://blog.p2pfoundation.net/?p=40429 The General Assembly of the Catalan Integral Cooperative has confirmed a proposed partnership with the P2P Foundation. This is an important development for several reasons. First, the Catalan Integral Cooperative is the first new type of cooperative that is entirely in line with the idea for a new type of coops engaged in the co-production... Continue reading

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CIC montage

The General Assembly of the Catalan Integral Cooperative has confirmed a proposed partnership with the P2P Foundation.

This is an important development for several reasons.

First, the Catalan Integral Cooperative is the first new type of cooperative that is entirely in line with the idea for a new type of coops engaged in the co-production of the commons, and, after themselves already embodying these ideas before we formulated them in our recent appeal, they are committed to continue and pioneer the path of open cooperativism.

Second, the CIC fully endorses the Commons Transition Plan that was formulated in connection with the floksociety.org project in Ecuador. The FLOK experience was important in that it was a historical first for such ideas to be endorsed at a nation-state level, but also because that cooperation with a government brings its own type of challenges. How to transition towards partner state practices with a state that is not a partner state itself ?

The experience in Catalonia promises to be very different. While the CIC endorses the Commons Transition Plan as its own development plan and roadmap, of course to be adapted and concretized to their own needs, it wants to apply the proposals for the commonification of public services and the partner state, not at the state level, but at the civic level. So the aim here is to directly create civic institutions which can, within or outside of the CIC, carry out the same support functions and enable the further expansion of the commons economy, in particular to stimulate p2p-based production and manufacturing, which the CIC itself is already pioneering. If successful, we may well have a adaptable/changeable but also largely replicable model that could be used in other regions of the world as well, because it will have been the experience where different pieces of successful DNA have come together in a working model.

Here is the announcement of the CIC, translated from Catalan and Spanish:

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CIC and P2pfoundation strategic partners”

It’s been a while now since some people in the CIC took the initiative to start collaborating with the P2P Foundation after certifying our common goals. Indeed, the Permanent Assembly of July 27 approved supporting this line of strategic partnership between CIC and P2P Foundation.

In fact, the P2P Foundation itself (a foundation for the peer-to-peer alternatives), has already expressed the need to partner strategically. You can find more information about the purpose of the P2P Foundation on its website.

Amongst it’s priorities, the P2P Foundation includes the promotion of open cooperativism, as explained in this article. In this sense the CIC appears as one of the ongoing initiatives with most affinity to these principles of open cooperativism, and for both organizations it seems important to keep on developing it and make it known.

CIC and P2pfoundation strategic partnersAnother priority of the P2P Foundation, and one of the areas where they have developed more research, is to generate transitions towards open production processes related to knowledge and towards a social, common goods economy. In this sense, they have been collaborating with Flok Society, a project financed by the government of Ecuador, for which the following document was composed.

From the core work group of the CIC in this area we have suggested that they collaborate with us to tailor a plan of this type for the development of CIC in the following 5-10 years. The objective is not as a theoretical approximation, but to contribute towards identifying and developing key strategic projects that might enable the production of tangible and intangible commons to become one of the reference characteristics of the CIC’s approach to production.

The P2P Foundation has responded enthusiastically to the proposal, amongst other reasons because they will bring their experience and knowledge to a grassroots initiative like ours. We are already beginning to form a joint working group so as to get started with our work. Michel Bauwens, the P2P foundation’s co-founder, expressed his intention to find funding for this project through several independent European foundations.

In addition to these initiatives, as strategic partners, new ways for collaboration will most certainly appear in the future.”

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Video of the Day: Michel Bauwens’ Ouishare 2014 Hangout on the FLOK Society project https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/video-of-the-day-michel-bauwens-ouishare-2014-hangout-on-the-flok-society-project/2014/06/22 https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/video-of-the-day-michel-bauwens-ouishare-2014-hangout-on-the-flok-society-project/2014/06/22#respond Sun, 22 Jun 2014 08:16:34 +0000 http://blog.p2pfoundation.net/?p=39591 Here’s Michel Bauwens’ contribution to this years, Ouishare Fest: The Age of Communities Michel earnestly talks about the opportunities and challenges of the FLOK Society — Free, libre, open-knowledge society — a project founded by three government institutions in Ecuador, aiming to make a transition to an open-knowledge common society. To find out more, please read... Continue reading

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Here’s Michel Bauwens’ contribution to this years, Ouishare Fest: The Age of Communities Michel earnestly talks about the opportunities and challenges of the FLOK Society — Free, libre, open-knowledge society — a project founded by three government institutions in Ecuador, aiming to make a transition to an open-knowledge common society. To find out more, please read FLOK’s Transition Plan.


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