Cosmo-Local Reader
* Book: The Cosmolocal Reader. Ed. José Ramos, Sharon Ede, Michel Bauwens and Gien Wong. P2P Foundation, 2021.
- Download your free copy here: File:Cosmo Local Reader.pdf
- URL = https://clreader.net/
Description
Cosmo-Local Production is a methodology for creating value and products and services that are inspired by the following basic rules (see below). and marries the planetary globalization of knowledge, the 'smart' localization of production, and both local and planetary mutualization, i.e. marrying distributed making and global open innovation:
1) the subsidiarity of material production: i.e. localizing production where sensible, in order to bring production closer to the places of need, support the local economy, and substantially diminish the human footprint
2) global knowledge collaboration through open and global design communities, that bring innovation to bear on all participating distributed places of production
3) the choice for 'generative' models of entreprise in terms of property and governance mechanisms, to give all producers and stakeholder communities a voice
Summary:
"The Cosmolocal Reader features 50 chapters documenting and discussing theory and practice. From modular automotive manufacturing, to agri-robotics and peer to peer farming, community driven wind power and housing construction… to biohacking, furniture fabrication, upcycling, prosthetics, and disaster relief, over 40 cases and examples from around the world provide a foundation to consider what exists and what could be, and 12 essays provide thought provoking ideas, reflections, critique and imagination.
Cosmolocalism stands for a transformation in how we produce the stuff of life. It is a contested space with no guarantees. There are patent wars and appropriations of IP, the challenges in building and financing open source and open design start ups, creating urban commons ecosystems, and a variety of other challenges. But we see possibilities bubbling through the surface. And, the challenges we are facing are asking for bold and transformative thinking and strategy. Today we also hold new technological potentials, creative human labor that can be mutualised, and new modes of economic, political and cultural organisation. The ingredients for change are sitting before us. In this book we bring many of these ingredients together for us to consider how we use these to shape the world we want to become."
(https://clreader.net/?page_id=61)
Contents
Essays
Section 1: Cosmolocal Framings
- A Genealogy of Cosmolocalism
Alexandros Schismenos, Vasilis Niaros and Lucas Lemos
- “Do-It-Together”: Towards the Factories of the Future
Laurent Dupont, Fedoua Kasmi, Joshua M. Pearce, Roland J. Ortt
- Evolving Systems for Generative Justice: Decolonial Approaches to the Cosmolocal
Ron Eglash, Audrey Bennett, Michael Lachney, and William Babbitt
- The Pulsation of the Commons: The Temporal Context for the Cosmolocal Transition
Michel Bauwens and José Ramos
Section 2: Building Cosmolocal Ecosystems
- Making Room for the Community-Based Circular Economy
Sharon Ede
- Cosmolocal Questions: From Tech Trend to Protocol Commons
José Ramos
- Fab Cities and the Urban Transformations of the 21st Century
Tomas Diez
- Financing Cosmolocalism
Andrew Ward
- Cosmolocalism, a Tool for the Social Appropriation of Knowledge and Rural Development
Willmar Ricardo Rugeles Joya
Section 3: Challenging Cosmolocalism
- Repositioning Cosmolocal In A ‘Beyond’ Space-Place
Michael McAllum
- Cosmolocalization & Localization: Towards a Critical Convergence
Helena Norberg-Hodge, Alex Jensen, Steven Gorelick and Henry Coleman
- An Interview with Paul Wildman: the Australian Bush Mechanic and her Potential in Helping to Save the Planet
Paul Wildman with Michel Bauwens
Cases and Examples
Section 4: Cosmolocal Stories
- Let there be light: IIT Bombay’s SoUL Project to Energize Rural India
Raji Ajwani Ramchandani and Snehal Awate
- Rural Dynamism in the Digital Age
David Li
- An Open Source Preemptive Strike in the Coming War Over The Freedom to Make Your Own Products
Joshua M. Pearce
- Utopia Maker
Chrystèle Bazin
- AgOpenGPS and DIY Open Farm Innovation: An Overview
Chris Bennett
- Chang’an: 3D Printing Cyberpunk Town on Pearl River Delta
Vicky Xie, David Li, and Kangkang Zhang
Section 5: Cosmolocal Explorations
- Wind Empowerment, Pico-hydro and Nea Guinea
Vasilis Kostakis, Kostas Latoufis, Minas Liarokapis, Michel Bauwens
- Farm Hack: A Farmer-Driven Platform for Knowledge Exchange
Chris Giotitsas
- L’atelier Paysan: Peasants Building Their Own Tools
Chris Giotitsas
- Open Bionics
Vasilis Kostakis, Kostas Latoufis, Minas Liarokapis, Michel Bauwens
- Sensorica
Michel Bauwens and Vasilis Niaros
- Tzoumakers
Alekos Pantazis and Morgan Meyer
- MuSIASEM: Accounting for material/energy flows and their limits
Michel Bauwens and Alex Pazaitis, with additions from Gien Wong
- FabChain: Linking advanced research to urban metabolisms and mainstream production
and manufacturing Michel Bauwens and Alex Pazaitis
- FairCoin and FairCoop: Tools for a cosmo-local, open cooperative ecosystem
Michel Bauwens and Alex Pazaitis
- Envienta
Gabor Kiss
- Holochain: An alternative to a global distributed ledger, based on biomimicry
Michel Bauwens and Alex Pazaitis
- AbilityMade
Jose Ramos and Melissa Fuller
Section 6: Cosmolocal Q&A
- bHive Cooperative
Ian McBurney, in response to questions by Jose Ramos
- Open Motors
Yuki Liu, in response to questions by Jose Ramos
- Wikifactory
Carolina Portugal in response to questions by Jose Ramos
Section 7: Cosmolocal Snapshots
- Appropedia
Sharon Ede
- Cosmolocalism
Vasilis Kostakis
- FarmBot
Michel Bauwens and Jose Ramos
- Field Ready
Sharon Ede
- GLIA
Jose Ramos
- Hexayurt
Christina Priavolou
- LEKA Restaurant
Sharon Ede
- Multifactory
Michel Bauwens
- Open Source COVID-19 Medical Supplies
Sharon Ede
- Open Source Ecology
Jose Ramos
- OSE Microhouse
Christina Priavolou
- Open Desk
Sharon Ede
- Open Food Network
Sharon Ede
- Open Insulin
Jose Ramos
- Precious Plastic
Abril Chimal
- RepRap
Jose Ramos
- Wikihouse
Christina Priavolou
Via [1]