P2P and Planetary Futures: Difference between revisions
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* ask for draft version from the [[P2P Lab]] | * ask for draft version from the [[P2P Lab]] | ||
* The full book: [[Critical Posthumanism and Planetary Futures]]. Ed. by Debashish Banerji et al.. Springer India. | |||
[[Category:Articles]] | [[Category:Articles]] | ||
[[Category:Global Governance]] | [[Category:Global Governance]] | ||
[[Category:P2P Theory]] | [[Category:P2P Theory]] | ||
[[Category:Michel Bauwens]] | |||
[[Category:Movements]] | |||
[[Category:Michel Bauwens]] | [[Category:Michel Bauwens]] | ||
Latest revision as of 05:28, 7 July 2020
* Article / chapter: Ramos, Jose, Bauwens, Michel and Vasilis Kostakis. 2016, forthcoming. “P2P and Planetary Futures” in Carslon, R. (Ed.). Critical Posthumanism and Planetary Futures. Berlin: Springer.
URL = https://www.academia.edu/30510942/P2P_and_Planetary_Futures_Toward_a_synthetic_theory_for_P2P_alter-_globalization_ [1]
Abstract
"This chapter presents peer-to-peer theory and practice in the context of alter-globalization and planetary perspective on change. It begins through a short elicitation on peer-to-peer theory. It then synthesizes a dialogic engagement between peer-to-peer (P2P) theory and nine perspectives on planetary change: reform liberalism, post-development, relocalization, cosmopolitanism, neo-Marxism, engaged ecumenism, meta-industrial, autonomism/horizontalism, and co-evolutionary perspectives. The chapter then presents a synopsis of a ground breaking effort in the application of P2P theory, the Free Libre Open Knowledge (FLOK) project in Ecuador, which provides a concrete example of P2P as an alter-globalization practice."
More Information
- ask for draft version from the P2P Lab
- The full book: Critical Posthumanism and Planetary Futures. Ed. by Debashish Banerji et al.. Springer India.