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A list of people oriented towards thinking about a sharing, commons, p2p oriented society. | A list of people oriented towards thinking about a sharing, commons, p2p oriented society. | ||
We started compiling this list until 2012, but at the prompt of [[User:Asimong | Simon Grant]], we are now trying to make it useful through a topical organization, so that you can find experts, researchers etc .. in specific domains of action. | |||
This list is male-dominated, while this list is larger and exclusively female, see [[100 Women Who Are Co-Creating the P2P Society]]; we hope to integrate them if time. | |||
To do list: | |||
* categorize all the names by topic, topics in alphabetical order, names within topic in alphabetical order | |||
* integrate 100 Women list in this master list, see [[100 Women Who Are Co-Creating the P2P Society]] | |||
* consider this as an introdoctury selection to our much larger biographical directory section, [[:Category:Bios]] , which contains nearly 1,200 biographies. | |||
=Public Intellectuals= | |||
==General== | |||
#[[Michel Bauwens]] **, [[P2P Theory]], founder of [[P2P Foundation]]; [[Michel Bauwens' English Language Bibliography]] | |||
#[[Yochai Benkler]] *, legal scholar, author of the classic study of [[Peer Production]], i.e. the [[Wealth of Networks]] | |||
#[[David Bollier]] **, author of [[Viral Spiral]], foremost commons scholar, now working on emerging [[Commons Law]] framework | |||
#[[Sally Goerner]]: on mutualism and the next 'integral' civilisation | |||
#[[Neal Gorenflo]] **, editor of [[Shareable]] magazine, on sharing as a social practice | |||
#[[Silke Helfrich]] **, commons researcher and advocate | |||
==Politics== | |||
#[[Amelia Andersdotter]] ([[wikipedia:Amelia Andersdotter|wikipedia]]), Pirate Party, Sweden | |||
#[[Rick Falkvinge]], Pirate Party founder | |||
#[[Mayo Fuster Morell]], European social movements, modalities of open source and platform governance | |||
#[[Michael Gurstein]], community networks | |||
#[[Joss Hands]] *, digitally-empowered political activism | |||
===Security / Warfare / Conflict studies=== | |||
#[[Athina Karatzogianni]] **, cyberconflicts | |||
==Economics== | |||
#[[Adam Arvidsson]] **, on the ethical economy | |||
#[[Marvin Brown]] ** , [[Civilizing the Economy]], on civic economics | |||
#[[Axel Bruns]], theorizing [[Produsage]] | |||
#[[Allen Butcher]], expert on [[Community Economics]] | |||
#[[Chris Carlsson]] *, [[Nowtopia]], on local productive economic associations | |||
#[[Kevin Carson]] **, mutualism, relocalized production | |||
#[[Chris Cook]], [[Open Capital]] | |||
#[[David de Ugarte]] **, on Phyles as a new global organisational form | |||
#[[Lisa Gansky]] *, on the [[Mesh Economy]] | |||
#[[Wolfgang Hoeschele]] **, economics of abundance | |||
===[[Commons-Oriented Economists]]=== | |||
(This list is updated here: [[Commons-Oriented Economists]]); it should be integrated with the above. | |||
A list originally compiled by [[David Bollier]]: | |||
#[[Peter Barnes]], Pt. Reyes Station, California (former entrepreneur; commons; Sky Trust) | |||
#[[Yochai Benkler]], Harvard Law School (digital commons; not an economist, but he might as well be) | |||
#Sam Bowles, Santa Fe Institute (economics as seen through complexity theory & evolutionary sciences) | |||
#James Boyce, UMass Amherst (ecological economics) | |||
#[[Herman Daly]], steady-state economics | |||
#Gerald Epstein, UMass Amherst (cooperatives) | |||
#Josh Farley, U. of Vermont (ecological economics, community development) | |||
#Nancy Folbre, UMass Amherst (feminist economics/caring economy) | |||
#Katherine Gibson, Australia (community economics; former writing partner with the late Julie Graham, a.k.a., J.-K. Gibson-Graham) | |||
#[[Wolfgang Hoeschele]], Truman State University, Missouri (Solidarity Economy, commons) | |||
#David Korten, author | |||
#Richard Norgaard, UC Berkeley | |||
#[[Elinor Ostrom]], Arizona State & Indiana U. (commons; not an economist, but she might as well be) | |||
#Wolfgang Sachs, Wuppertal Institute, Germany | |||
Ezio Manzini, | |||
==Legal== | |||
#[[James Boyle]], against IP enclosures | |||
#[[Yochai Benkler]] *, legal scholar, author of the classic study of [[Peer Production]], i.e. the [[Wealth of Networks]] | |||
==Technological== | |||
#[[Arthur Brock]], [[Open Money]], USA | |||
#[[Jaromil]], hacker | |||
#[[Pekka Himanen]], the hacker ethic | |||
==Social== | |||
#[[Manuel Castells]], networked society | |||
#[[Pat Kane]] **, author the [[Play Ethic]] | |||
==Educational== | |||
#[[Stephen Downes]], peer learning | |||
==Spiritual== | |||
#[[Charles Eisenstein]] *, author of The [[Ascent of Humanity]] and [[Sacred Economics]] | |||
#[[Jorge Ferrer]] **, participatory spirituality | |||
#[[John Heron]] **, participatory spirituality, cooperative inquiry | |||
==Gender== | |||
#[[Silvia Federici]]: [http://www.commoner.org.uk/?p=113], role of women in the commons | |||
==Labor== | |||
#[[Alex Foti]], precarious workers movement, Italy | |||
==Governance / Organisational Theory== | |||
#[[Alexander Galloway]], [[Protocollary Power]] in networks | |||
#[[Paul B. Hartzog]] **, on complexity, panarchy, and global governance | |||
==Money== | |||
#[[Thomas Greco]] **, [[Open Money]] and [[Credit Commons]] | |||
==Still to classify== | |||
#[[Dougald Hine]] | |||
#[[Brian Holmes]] | |||
#[[Dmytri Kleiner]] **, anti-capitalist peer production through [[Venture Communism]] | |||
#[[Lawrence Lessig]], IP law, creator of [[Creative Commons]] | |||
#[[Simona Levi]] **, founder and leader of the [[Free Culture Forum]] | |||
#[[Bernard Lietaer]], monetary reform and transformation | |||
#[[Alessandro Ludovico]], Neural.it, p2p art and culture, Italy | |||
#[[Ezio Manzini]] **, local mutual aid oriented inititiatives by civil society groups | |||
#[[Ugo Mattei]], commons law, italian/european commons movement | |||
#Alan McCluskey, community-based learning | |||
#[[Armin Medosch]] | |||
#[[Massimo Menichinelli]], on [[Open Design]] | |||
#[[Glyn Moody]], active free software advocate and commentator | |||
#[[Phoebe Moore]] **, global labour trends | |||
#[[Matteo Pasquinelli]], conflicts in the knowledge economy | |||
#[[George Pór]] **, theorizing [[Collective Intelligence]] | |||
#[[Mathieu O'Neill]] **, governance of open source communities | |||
#[[Apichai Puntasen]], Thailand, [[Buddhist Economics]] | |||
#[[James Quilligan]] **, theorizing the [[Global Commons]] | |||
#[[John Robb]] *, open source insurgencies and resilient communities | |||
#[[Andy Robinson]], social movement thinker, UK | |||
#[[David Ronfeldt]]** | |||
#[[Douglas Rushkoff]] **, author, development of democratic cyber culture | |||
#[[Samuel Rose]] **, peer production and local communities, open p2p infrastructures | |||
#[[Nikos Salingaros]] **, on [[P2P Urbanism]] | |||
#[[Juliet Schor]] *, economics of abundance | |||
#[[Trebor Scholz]] **, distributed creativity | |||
#[[Orsan Senalp]]**, p2p and labor | |||
#[[Clay Shirky]] *, the [[Cognitive Surplus]] making possible bottom-up [[Peer Production]] | |||
#[[George Siemens]], connectivist learning | |||
#[[Felix Stalder]], theorizing free culture and open movements | |||
#[[Richard Stallman]], founder of free software | |||
#[[Don Tapscott]], author of [[Wikinomics]] | |||
#[[Tiziana Terranova]], exploitation of free labour in networks | |||
#[[Tere Vaden]] **, the [[Political Economy of Digital Literacy]] | |||
#[[Jeff Vail]] *, a theory of distributed power | |||
#[[Roberto Verzola]] **, on the economics of abundance and scarcity | |||
#[[Eric von Hippel]] *, user-led innovation in industrial production | |||
#[[Hilary Wainwright]] **, democratic and participatory public services, and the link between the commons and labour | |||
#[[Jay Walljasper]] **, [[All That We Share]], on the emergence of local commons initiatives | |||
#[[Mackenzie Wark]] *, author of the [[Hacker's Manifesto]], a class analysis of the [[Hacking Class]] | |||
#[[Steve Webber]], author of the [[Success of Open Source]] | |||
#[[Catherine Casserly]], CEO of Creative Commons | |||
[[Category:P2P Foundation]] | |||
[[Category:Bios]] | |||
[[Category:P2P Theory]] |
Latest revision as of 10:36, 30 August 2019
Context
A list of people oriented towards thinking about a sharing, commons, p2p oriented society.
We started compiling this list until 2012, but at the prompt of Simon Grant, we are now trying to make it useful through a topical organization, so that you can find experts, researchers etc .. in specific domains of action.
This list is male-dominated, while this list is larger and exclusively female, see 100 Women Who Are Co-Creating the P2P Society; we hope to integrate them if time.
To do list:
- categorize all the names by topic, topics in alphabetical order, names within topic in alphabetical order
- integrate 100 Women list in this master list, see 100 Women Who Are Co-Creating the P2P Society
- consider this as an introdoctury selection to our much larger biographical directory section, Category:Bios , which contains nearly 1,200 biographies.
Public Intellectuals
General
- Michel Bauwens **, P2P Theory, founder of P2P Foundation; Michel Bauwens' English Language Bibliography
- Yochai Benkler *, legal scholar, author of the classic study of Peer Production, i.e. the Wealth of Networks
- David Bollier **, author of Viral Spiral, foremost commons scholar, now working on emerging Commons Law framework
- Sally Goerner: on mutualism and the next 'integral' civilisation
- Neal Gorenflo **, editor of Shareable magazine, on sharing as a social practice
- Silke Helfrich **, commons researcher and advocate
Politics
- Amelia Andersdotter (wikipedia), Pirate Party, Sweden
- Rick Falkvinge, Pirate Party founder
- Mayo Fuster Morell, European social movements, modalities of open source and platform governance
- Michael Gurstein, community networks
- Joss Hands *, digitally-empowered political activism
Security / Warfare / Conflict studies
- Athina Karatzogianni **, cyberconflicts
Economics
- Adam Arvidsson **, on the ethical economy
- Marvin Brown ** , Civilizing the Economy, on civic economics
- Axel Bruns, theorizing Produsage
- Allen Butcher, expert on Community Economics
- Chris Carlsson *, Nowtopia, on local productive economic associations
- Kevin Carson **, mutualism, relocalized production
- Chris Cook, Open Capital
- David de Ugarte **, on Phyles as a new global organisational form
- Lisa Gansky *, on the Mesh Economy
- Wolfgang Hoeschele **, economics of abundance
Commons-Oriented Economists
(This list is updated here: Commons-Oriented Economists); it should be integrated with the above.
A list originally compiled by David Bollier:
- Peter Barnes, Pt. Reyes Station, California (former entrepreneur; commons; Sky Trust)
- Yochai Benkler, Harvard Law School (digital commons; not an economist, but he might as well be)
- Sam Bowles, Santa Fe Institute (economics as seen through complexity theory & evolutionary sciences)
- James Boyce, UMass Amherst (ecological economics)
- Herman Daly, steady-state economics
- Gerald Epstein, UMass Amherst (cooperatives)
- Josh Farley, U. of Vermont (ecological economics, community development)
- Nancy Folbre, UMass Amherst (feminist economics/caring economy)
- Katherine Gibson, Australia (community economics; former writing partner with the late Julie Graham, a.k.a., J.-K. Gibson-Graham)
- Wolfgang Hoeschele, Truman State University, Missouri (Solidarity Economy, commons)
- David Korten, author
- Richard Norgaard, UC Berkeley
- Elinor Ostrom, Arizona State & Indiana U. (commons; not an economist, but she might as well be)
- Wolfgang Sachs, Wuppertal Institute, Germany
Legal
- James Boyle, against IP enclosures
- Yochai Benkler *, legal scholar, author of the classic study of Peer Production, i.e. the Wealth of Networks
Technological
- Arthur Brock, Open Money, USA
- Jaromil, hacker
- Pekka Himanen, the hacker ethic
Social
- Manuel Castells, networked society
- Pat Kane **, author the Play Ethic
Educational
- Stephen Downes, peer learning
Spiritual
- Charles Eisenstein *, author of The Ascent of Humanity and Sacred Economics
- Jorge Ferrer **, participatory spirituality
- John Heron **, participatory spirituality, cooperative inquiry
Gender
- Silvia Federici: [1], role of women in the commons
Labor
- Alex Foti, precarious workers movement, Italy
Governance / Organisational Theory
- Alexander Galloway, Protocollary Power in networks
- Paul B. Hartzog **, on complexity, panarchy, and global governance
Money
- Thomas Greco **, Open Money and Credit Commons
Still to classify
- Dougald Hine
- Brian Holmes
- Dmytri Kleiner **, anti-capitalist peer production through Venture Communism
- Lawrence Lessig, IP law, creator of Creative Commons
- Simona Levi **, founder and leader of the Free Culture Forum
- Bernard Lietaer, monetary reform and transformation
- Alessandro Ludovico, Neural.it, p2p art and culture, Italy
- Ezio Manzini **, local mutual aid oriented inititiatives by civil society groups
- Ugo Mattei, commons law, italian/european commons movement
- Alan McCluskey, community-based learning
- Armin Medosch
- Massimo Menichinelli, on Open Design
- Glyn Moody, active free software advocate and commentator
- Phoebe Moore **, global labour trends
- Matteo Pasquinelli, conflicts in the knowledge economy
- George Pór **, theorizing Collective Intelligence
- Mathieu O'Neill **, governance of open source communities
- Apichai Puntasen, Thailand, Buddhist Economics
- James Quilligan **, theorizing the Global Commons
- John Robb *, open source insurgencies and resilient communities
- Andy Robinson, social movement thinker, UK
- David Ronfeldt**
- Douglas Rushkoff **, author, development of democratic cyber culture
- Samuel Rose **, peer production and local communities, open p2p infrastructures
- Nikos Salingaros **, on P2P Urbanism
- Juliet Schor *, economics of abundance
- Trebor Scholz **, distributed creativity
- Orsan Senalp**, p2p and labor
- Clay Shirky *, the Cognitive Surplus making possible bottom-up Peer Production
- George Siemens, connectivist learning
- Felix Stalder, theorizing free culture and open movements
- Richard Stallman, founder of free software
- Don Tapscott, author of Wikinomics
- Tiziana Terranova, exploitation of free labour in networks
- Tere Vaden **, the Political Economy of Digital Literacy
- Jeff Vail *, a theory of distributed power
- Roberto Verzola **, on the economics of abundance and scarcity
- Eric von Hippel *, user-led innovation in industrial production
- Hilary Wainwright **, democratic and participatory public services, and the link between the commons and labour
- Jay Walljasper **, All That We Share, on the emergence of local commons initiatives
- Mackenzie Wark *, author of the Hacker's Manifesto, a class analysis of the Hacking Class
- Steve Webber, author of the Success of Open Source
- Catherine Casserly, CEO of Creative Commons