ECC2013
This is the official overview page of the conference.
- For research on the topic of "commons economics", check the Introduction to the P2P Foundation Wiki Material about Commons Economics.
- Below in this page, there is #Post-Conference Coverage ; and #Post-Conference Proposals
Context
ECONOMICS AND THE COMMON(S): FROM SEED FORM TO CORE PARADIGM
Exploring New Ideas, Practices and Alliances ; Berlin, Germany, May 22–24, 2013
Working Draft of Program, February 6, 2013
The conference was preceded by three workshops:
- The Asia Commons Deep Dive ; see also: An Interpretive Summary of the Asian Deep Dive on Economics and the Commons, by David Bollier.
- The Latin America Commons Deep Dive
- The Europe Commons Deep Dive ; see also: Reflections from the European Deep Dive on the Commons
Documentation on the conference and its topics
- Comprehensive list of Participants, see [1]
- Listing of Organizational affiliations of participants, see [2]
For research on the topic of "commons economics", check the category page here: [3]
- ABC of Commons Economics
- Articles on Commons Economics
- Audio Podcasts on Commons Economics
- Books on Commons Economics
- Cases in Commons Economics
- Discussions on Commons Economics
- Events on Commons Economics
- Videos on Commons Economics
Key Event Links
- OPENING OF ECC AND PUBLIC CONFERENCE ON WEDNESDAY, MAY 22 4.30 pm [4]
- STREAM DESCRIPTIONS [5]
- SIDE EVENTS [6]
Introduction
One of the most significant impediments to positive social change is the entrenched power of market-fundamentalism as an economic and political paradigm. The prevailing dogma is that only a scheme of individual self-interest, expansive individual property rights, market exchange and globalized free trade can advance human well-being. This view has increasingly been called into question as the predatory dynamics of the market economy became clear and as its threats to the biosphere have become more acute.
ECONOMICS AND THE COMMON(S): FROM SEED FORM TO CORE PARADIGM seeks to open up some new vistas in politics, economics and culture by exploring the commons as an alternative worldview and provisioning system. A rich array of commons – in nature, cities, civic life, the Internet, and many other realms – are showing that commons can provide stable, equitable and ecologically benign alternatives to conventional markets.
The Economics and the Commons Conference (ECC) will expand and empower this work by exploring the commons as a coherent field of inquiry and action. It will convene approximately 240 commoners -- researchers, practitioners and advocates from around the world -- to explore the relationship of conventional economics and the commons, showcase key actors and initiatives, and devise plans for moving the commons paradigm forward. Special care will be taken to avoid a “sectoralization” of commons discussion because we believe that a coherent “general narrative” of the commons nurtures global social change and applies across many different sectors of commoning.
Among the questions to be asked: What core principles of commoning can be identified across different resource domains? What makes a commons so generative? In what circumstances can commons-based provisioning models substitute for conventional markets, or interact constructively with markets? How can the protection and re-creation of the commons be made an integrated part of productive processes?
The Economics and the Commons Conference (ECC) will be hosted by the Heinrich Böll Foundation (hbf) in cooperation with the Commons Strategies Group, The Charles Léopold Mayer Foundation and Remix the Commons. The event will take place at the headquarters of hbf in Berlin from May 22 to 24, 2013. Optional side-events on topics such as communications strategies for the commons, governance of global commons, and others, will be held on May 21-22 and 25.
Goals of the Conference
The ECC seeks to show the breadth and feasibility of commons-based provisioning and forge a coherent narrative and analysis about it and the next steps for action.
Substantive discussion at the conference will therefore focus on several key themes:
- The commons as a way to move beyond conventional economics;
- Alternative economic and provisioning models;
- The transformations needed to move to a new type of economy.
Conference Streams
The conference will feature six separate Streams with plenary keynote talks and breakout sessions to probe issues in greater depth. The ECC and its Streams are designed to foster dialogue, collaboration, creative thinking and follow-up action, and not just “expert” presentations. The six Streams are:
1. Land and Nature
Throughout the world, neoliberal economic policies have had destructive effects, resulting both in the degradation of natural environments as well as reduction in fair access to shared resources. A parallel example of this can be well seen in the aggressive privatization of water systems in large metropolitan areas like Paris, Berlin and Naples, which has resulted in price increases, lower quality water, reduced access to water and less democratic control. Although a flourishing anti-privatization movement in both Europe and the Global South has arisen, much of this advocacy does not have the analytical and theoretical tools to push for a paradigm shift in the economic organization of our natural resources as a commons. This stream will bring together legal scholars, ecological economists and commons advocates to develop commons-based policies and models for governing shared natural resources, especially water and land.
- Stream Coordinator: Saki Bailey (Italy)
- Detailed stream description
- Documentation on the ECC2013 Land and Nature Stream
- Rough Draft Notes on Water Breakout Group for Land and Nature Stream
2. Doing away with labor: Working and Caring in a World of Commons
Currently, we witness two parallel phenomena: Global development policies cause the loss of use rights to the natural commons as the livelihood support system for an estimated two billion people. At the same time, an ecology of collaborative production is (re)emerging beyond markets, money and organizational hierarchies as we know them. The lines between production and consumption are becoming blurred by social practices, which are based on sharing and (indirect) reciprocity. These practices are providing innovative answers to the fundamental question of how to (re)produce our livelihoods. Yet, most of the time, they do neither recognize "the whole of work", which means to overcome the structural divisions between productive work and care work (education, health, eldercare, household level, etc.) nor do they reduce embedded gender imbalances in the performance of these activities. And yet, the emerging new patterns bear the potential for a historical transformation toward a model that we could term "(re)prosumption". It is a created term to combine two sides on a structural level: reproduction and production on the one hand and production and consumption on the other. It could provide alternatives to both, globalized capital(ism) and “national-developmentalism”, and to overcome structural causes of gender inequality and the markets externalization of care and nature services. These trends also point to the transcendence of the conditions that historically forced the division between social reproduction and economic production. While most unionists tend to focus on the labor market and a fair distribution of available employment in our world of today, the work of the future may no longer be a “product” that is bought and sold in the market, but it could be managed as a commons. This is the vision we wish to discuss and develop further.
- Stream coordinator: Heike Löschmann (Germany)
- Detailed stream description
- Documentation on the ECC2013 Working and Caring Stream
3. Treating Knowledge, Culture and Science as Commons
* Read the Final Report of the Knowledge Stream!
Science, and recently, free software, are paradigmatic knowledge commons; copyright and patent are paradigmatic enclosures. But our focus on paradigmatic examples and the language of “intellectual property” and “openness” may actually limit our imaginations about what might be possible. If we took the commons seriously, for example, we might begin to see that copyright and patent are not just knowledge enclosures, but “modern” ways of enforcing privileges and inequalities in what may be known and communicated. Similarly, that open access and use is not necessarily an emancipation, but rather a shift in control to those who own the digital platform. This Stream will attempt to (re)consider and (re)conceptualize the free/libre/open/commons movements from a strategic and commons-first perspective.
- Stream Coordinator: Mike Linksvayer (USA)
- Detailed stream description
- Documentation on the ECC2013 Knowledge Stream + Resources recommended by stream participants
4. Money, Markets, Value and the Commons
The dominant economy is to a huge extent market-fundamentalist and money driven. It is built around unsustainable principles like extraction, competition, profit and exponential growth and fueled by interest bearing credit creation through a profit oriented banking system. A Commons Economy is driven by other motives and proposes a different mindset and different ordering categories than capital, ownership and money. Some commoners tend to imagine a Commons Economy as a world beyond (artificial) scarcity, rendering money and markets irrelevant, which suggests, that commons can function without money as we know it. Others focus on redefining the role of money or how to design money itself as a commons. But all agree that if a Commons Economy still has credit, money and markets (or at least marketplaces), they will be very different in character than our current economy.
The objective of this Stream is to integrate the different “paths of imagination” towards a Commons Economy, and to get a clearer picture of the architecture and underlying design principles of a commons-oriented market places and exchange systems.
- Stream Coordinator: Ludwig Schuster (Germany)
- Detailed stream description
- Documentation on the ECC2013 Money Stream
5. New Infrastructures for Commoning by Design
One of the main challenges in advancing commons as a stable paradigm is finding ways to develop commons-friendly infrastructures. We lack infrastructures that “by design” foster and protect new practices of commoning. Many existing systems, indeed, enable commons-unfriendly practices (e.g. fossil fuel-based individual transportation) or generate negative social and environmental impacts (e.g., nuclear power and even “clean” energy sources). While some infrastructures have progressive dimensions (using distributed networks, promoting local access), they may be minor parts of larger, regressive infrastructures that still depend upon individual transportation, centralized power grids and concentrated industrial structures. Yet there are important lessons to be learned from commons-based infrastructures such as Internet protocols, which have fostered the emergence of countless digital information commons. An urgent need of our time is to ensure that infrastructures will systematically encourage the formation and protection of commons.
- Stream Coordinator: Miguel Said Vieira (Brazil)
- Detailed stream description
- Documentation on the ECC2013 Infrastructure Stream
- Rough Meeting Notes from the Infrastructure Stream
Conference Organizers
The Commons Strategies Group and Heinrich Böll Foundation [7] are the joint organizers of this conference, which is an outgrowth of the landmark International Commons Conference (ICC) in Berlin in November 2010. That event brought together about 180 commons activists, academics and project leaders from 34 countries, and started a cross-disciplinary political and policy dialogue about the commons in diverse international settings.
The Charles Léopold Mayer Foundation supported the International Commons Conference in 2010 as well.
Participants
Visual Identity
- Logo and variations
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Official logo
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Alternative logo
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Logo with streams icon
- Backgrounds and art
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Background 1
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Background 2
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Background 3
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Background 4
- Stream backgrounds
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Stream 1
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Stream 2
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Stream 3
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Stream 4
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Stream 5
- Color palette
In RGB and HEX formats
- Land and Nature
- 81, 161, 38
- 51a126
- Working and Caring
- 197, 20, 28
- c5141c
- Knowledge, Culture and Science
- 69, 140, 194
- 458cc2
- Money, Markets and Value
- 158, 30, 130
- 9e1e82
- Infrastructures for Commoning
- 245, 127, 17
- f57f11
Side Events
A number of related side events will take place before, during and after the conference. List of Side Events:
- Commons Culture Communications - 2013
- Commons for Public Health - 2013
- Commons Education Commons - 2013 : Further Developments on the Commons Education Commons
- How To Change the International Rules for the Commons in Europe? - 2013
- Commons in Intentional Communities - 2013
- Commons Abundance Network - Post-conference 2013
- Commons in the Post-Soviet Area - 2013
- Enabling a Global Climate Commons Pathway - 2013 ; Notes and Power Points for Climate Side Event
Practical Information for the Economics of the Commons Conference
Venue
- Heinrich-Böll-Stiftung, Schumannstr. 8, 10117 Berlin
- Fon: (030) 285 34-0, Fax: (030) 285 34-109
- http://www.boell.de/foundation/about-us.html
Hotels
Choices you have for booking your own accomodation.
Best Western Hotel Berlin-Mitte
- Albrechtstraße 25/Reinhardtstraße, 10117 Berlin, (right opposite the Heinrich Böll Foundation)
- Tel: ++49 (0) 30-5268000, [email protected]
- Website: http://www.bestwestern.de/hotels/Berlin/BEST-WESTERN-Hotel-Berlin-Mitte
- Costs
- 93 € for single
- 103 € for double room incl. breakfast
These are special rates for us and if you want to book your accommodation in this hotel, kindly mention the code “1925972 Heinrich Böll” when booking.
Motel One Berlin-Hauptbahnhof
- Invalidenstraße 54, 10557 Berlin (1,8 km to the Heinrich Böll Foundation)
- Tel: ++49 (0)30- 3641005-0, [email protected]
- Website: http://www.motel-one.com/de/hotels/berlin/hotel-berlin-hauptbahnhof/#t=hotelinfo
- Costs
- 76,50 € for single room incl. breakfast
These are special rates for us and if you want to book your accommodation in this hotel, kindly mention the code “534085748 Heinrich Böll” when booking.
Alternative accommodation:
If you look for alternatives to a hotel, please browse through the following web-pages:
- BeWelcome in Berlin
- Couchsurfing in Berlin
- Alternative flats:
Please look for the area around or in Berlin-Mitte. City codes: 10115, 10117, 10119, 10178, 10179 which is the nearest area to the Foundation.
Transportation
There is direct bus connection from the airport Tegel to the Heinrich Böll Foundation and Best Western Hotel with bus TXL Airport Express, costing only 2.40 € for one way ticket (Zones A & B). Get down at the 7th stop “Karlplatz” and then walk 350 meters to the Heinrich Böll Foundation, or to the Best Western Hotel. You can also stop at the Station "Washingtonplatz/Hauptbahnhof" to go the Motel One Berlin-Hauptbahnhof Hotel.
How to get there:
For guests arriving by train at the Central Railway Station (Hauptbahnhof) you find Motel One/ Berlin Hauptbahnhof next to the Railway Station. You can also take the TXL bus from Washingtonplatz (Exit to the South). Get down at the next stop “Karlplatz” or even walk the entire way to the Heinrich Böll Foundation (1.8 km, see map).
The nearest major station is Bahnhof Friedrichstrasse where all Stadtexpress (SE) or Regionalexpress (RE) trains, S- or U-Bahn from all four directions stop as well as the RE and SE trains or S-Bahn from and to the (Zones A, B and C costing 3,10 €) Schoenefeld Airport.
Upon arrival at Bahnhof Friedrichstraße take the Exit (to the West), cross the River Spree on the roofed iron bridge, then walk on the Albrechtstrasse and then cross the Reinhardtstrasse and you will see the Heinrich Böll Foundation on the left and Best Western on the right.
Assistance
Whom to contact in case you need advice?
- Kim Nommesch, Conference Assistant, mailto: [email protected]
- Tsewang Norbu, Conference Assistant, mailto: [email protected]
- Simone Zühr, Project Manager at International Politics Desk, mailto: [email protected]
phone: ++49 +30+28534-317, cellphone (during conference): +49 (0)151-4347 1254 (logistics/ admin/emergencies)
Video Presentations
- Silke Helfrich's opening keynote: Towards a Commons Creating Peer Economy ; video
The Remix the Commons Series
See: Defining the Commons
- Marvin Brown and Smàri Mc Carthy on Democracy and the Commons [8]
- George Por on the Art of Commoning [9]
- Ugo Mattei on the Commons Movement in Italy [10]
- Open Hardware Round Table at the Commons and Economics Conference in 2013 [11]
- George Por on the Commons Education
- New Infrastructures for Commoning by Design
- Money, Markets, Value and the Commons
- Knowledge, Culture and Science as Commons
- Theory and Practice in the Management of Natural Commons
- Friederike Habermann on the Ecommony
- Charlotte Hess on the Need for a Commons Research Agenda
- Tomislav Tomasevic on Commons-Based Political Struggles in Central and Eastern Europe
Directory
- Videos of Talks from the Economics and the Commons Conference
- Day 1
- Opening speech by Barbara Unmüßig http://youtu.be/G_Nk_rZWok0
- Keynotes Stefano Rodota and Maristella Svampa: http://youtu.be/H2YGN78ouGE
- Framing the ECC (Silke Helfrich): http://youtu.be/LLAK_M-ayfo
- Day 2
- Morning session Keynotes "Management of Natural Commons (Yoshua Farley / Ugo Mattei): http://youtu.be/pJv-YNyTUjM
- Keynote "Working and Caring in a World of Commons" (Heike Löschmann): http://youtu.be/7bwckeOXReE
- Keynote "New Infrastructures for Commoning by Design" (Miguel Said Viera): http://youtu.be/B5_5-fSnMJs
- Day 2 evening session Keynote "Treating Knowledge, Culture and Science as Commons" (Carolina Botero): http://youtu.be/AJlFK5fLHgE
- Keynote "Commoneering Money, Markets and Value" (Jem Bendell): http://youtu.be/w_f0QUln8PU
- Day 3
- Keynote "Life, Meaning and Spirituality in the Commons: Towards a Cultural Paradigm Shift" (Andreas Weber): http://youtu.be/fqI0qKFWugo
- Closing: Towards a Commons-Based Society: http://youtu.be/2mssjbGsDq8
Post-Conference Coverage
- Reactions from Participants to the Economics and the Commons Conference; part i, and part ii summarized by Silke Helfrich.
- ECC 2013 Berlin – highlights, by Helene Finidori in the Commons Abundance Network blog
- David Bollier, A Rich Convergence of Commoners, An Explosion of New Initiatives [12]
- Jay Walljasper, From Berlin With Hope, International Economics & the Commons Conference breaks new ground [13]
- Questions of Commons and Inclusion – conference report. By Anna Seravalli. [14]
- Neal Gorenflo's (Shareable) Report from the Economics and the Commons Conference [15]
- Tina Bakolitsa, Occupy London: Scrumming Futures, excellent 'atmospheric' account
- How Do We "Commonify" Our Minds?. Alexa Bradley. On The Commons.
- What the Commons Is Missing, By Joel Dietz.
- Notable quotes from the Economics and the Commons Conference by Christian Siefkes
- Denis Postle
Other Languages
In Spanish:
- Paradigma procomún y microrealidades bajo el paraguas berlinés #4thecommons: in-depth treatment by Rosa Fernandez of Colaborabora, Bilbao.
Special Topics
- Reciprocity and Stigmergy. By Stefan Meretz [18]