Category:Commons: Difference between revisions

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The Commons is a central concept relating to very many other topics in this Wiki.
 
* [[Introduction to the P2P Foundation Wiki Material about the Commons]]
 
The [[Commons]] is a central concept relating to very many other topics in this Wiki.


[[Michel Bauwens]] states the P2P position thus: "A commons is  
[[Michel Bauwens]] states the P2P position thus: "A commons is  
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(from the [[Commons]] page on this Wiki)
(from the [[Commons]] page on this Wiki)


The introduction compiled by [[Michel Bauwens]] which used to be here as the category page is now at [[Commons - Introduction]]
The [[Wikipedia:Commons|Wikipedia entry]] gives the origin of the term thus: "the Roman legal category ''res communis'', applied to things common to all to be used and enjoyed by everyone, as opposed to ''res publica'', applied to public property managed by the government."


The [[Wikipedia:Commons|Wikipedia entry]] gives the origin as "the Roman legal category ''res communis'', applied to things common to all to be used and enjoyed by everyone, as opposed to ''res publica'', applied to public property managed by the government."
==Key Ideas==


==Key Concepts==
* "The [[Tragedy of the Commons]]" is a famous paper by Garrett Hardin, which was sometimes taken as dismissing the feasibility of commons in general. But as the author later admitted, (e.g. [https://www.garretthardinsociety.org/articles/art_extension_tragedy_commons.html]) the "tragedy" properly relates to "unmanaged" commons, not to all commons.
* "The [[Tragedy of the Commons]]" is a famous paper by Garrett Hardin, which was taken to dismiss the feasibility of a commons. But as the author later admitted, (e.g. [https://www.garretthardinsociety.org/articles/art_extension_tragedy_commons.html]) the tragedy properly relates to "unmanaged" commons.
* [[Elinor Ostrom]] is widely cited and quoted as a key author in the field. She researched and documented several examples of commons that are effectively managed.
* [[Elinor Ostrom]] is widely cited and quoted as a key author in the field.  
* See our page on [[Enclosure]] to understand the meaning and significance of enclosure in opposing the Commons.
* [[Enclosure]]
* [[Commons-Based Peer Production]] points to a strategy for economic activity based on the commons. The P2P Foundation specifically aims to create a commons-centric society. See the article: [[Michel Bauwens' Blueprint for P2P Society]]


==Useful Learning Resources==
==Useful Learning Resources==
===Introductory===
===Introductory===
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20130726193304/http://www.beyondthecommons.com/understandingenclosure.html CommonsTransition and P2P: A Primer]
* Our page on [[Commons]]
* [[Quotes on the Commons]]
 
===Deeper Study===
* [https://www.tni.org/files/publication-downloads/commons_transition_and_p2p_primer_v9.pdf Commons Transition and P2P: A Primer] (2017) by Michel Bauwens et al. starts with some helpful basic explanation, and continues to around 50 pages of explaining related concepts including the politics of the commons, and [[Commons Transition]].
* [[Introduction to the P2P Foundation Wiki Material about the Commons]] compiled by [[Michel Bauwens]] ''(ex category page)''


==Related Categories==
''for subcategories, see below''
* [[:Category: Collaborative Economy]] – in our view, a collaborative economy is based around the commons
* And [[:Category: Peerproduction]] is a key concept in the collaborative economy


[[Category:P2P Paradigms]]
[[Category:P2P Paradigms]]

Latest revision as of 12:44, 19 September 2019

The Commons is a central concept relating to very many other topics in this Wiki.

Michel Bauwens states the P2P position thus: "A commons is

  1. shared resources (i.e. there is something objective about it)
  2. maintained or co-produced by a community or group of stakeholders (hence: a subjective activity and choice, 'there is no commons without commoning') and
  3. it is managed according to the rules and values of that community ('autonormativity'), which makes it also an alternative governance and property regime."

(from the Commons page on this Wiki)

The Wikipedia entry gives the origin of the term thus: "the Roman legal category res communis, applied to things common to all to be used and enjoyed by everyone, as opposed to res publica, applied to public property managed by the government."

Key Ideas

  • "The Tragedy of the Commons" is a famous paper by Garrett Hardin, which was sometimes taken as dismissing the feasibility of commons in general. But as the author later admitted, (e.g. [1]) the "tragedy" properly relates to "unmanaged" commons, not to all commons.
  • Elinor Ostrom is widely cited and quoted as a key author in the field. She researched and documented several examples of commons that are effectively managed.
  • See our page on Enclosure to understand the meaning and significance of enclosure in opposing the Commons.
  • Commons-Based Peer Production points to a strategy for economic activity based on the commons. The P2P Foundation specifically aims to create a commons-centric society. See the article: Michel Bauwens' Blueprint for P2P Society

Useful Learning Resources

Introductory

Deeper Study

Related Categories

for subcategories, see below

Subcategories

This category has the following 10 subcategories, out of 10 total.

C

G

U

Pages in category "Commons"

The following 200 pages are in this category, out of 2,021 total.

(previous page) (next page)

A

B

C

(previous page) (next page)