Category:Movements: Difference between revisions

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=Introduction=
=Introduction=
Marco Berlinguer:
"The free culture movements comprise a wide range of experiences
mainly emerging around the internet and the digital revolution.
They have generally developed independently, but they are loosely
aligned and show a mutually reinforcing dynamism – a ‘viral
spiral’, as David Bollier begin_of_the_skype_highlighting    end_of_the_skype_highlighting terms it.
All these movements emerged as practical and cultural
critiques of the aggressive attempts by corporations, aided by
Northern governments, to extend intellectual property rights
to knowledge, culture, information, communication and even
organisms and data. The process has been described as ‘the
second enclosures movement’ – the first being the enclosing of
common land and turning it into private property in late and
post-medieval England.
Following Felix Stalder, we can group these movements into
three different clusters:
* the [[Free Software Movement]], focusing on software source code;
* the [[Free Culture Movement]], focusing on cultural goods; and
* the [[Access To Knowledge]]  (A2K) movement, focusing on access to knowledge-intensive goods."


#Benjamin Mako Hill explains the [[Difference between the Free Software and Free Culture Movement]]
#Benjamin Mako Hill explains the [[Difference between the Free Software and Free Culture Movement]]
#[http://mitpress.mit.edu/books/chapters/0262562278chap22.pdf Conflicts in open source discourse]: review of idea currents in the free and open source software movement.
#[http://mitpress.mit.edu/books/chapters/0262562278chap22.pdf Conflicts in open source discourse]: review of idea currents in the free and open source software movement.
#David Bollier: [http://www.bollier.org/pdf/BerlinWizardsofOS3speechJune2004.pdf Is the Commons a movement?]
#David Bollier: [http://www.bollier.org/pdf/BerlinWizardsofOS3speechJune2004.pdf Is the Commons a movement?]
We feel particular kinship for the initiatives
#our wiki 'neighbours' listed in the [[WikiNode]] page
#the [http://uniteddiversity.com/commons-creation  Commons Creations] group in the UK
#[http://www.appropedia.org/Portal:Appropriate_technology Appropriate Technology]  platform


=Sister Organizations=
=Sister Organizations=

Revision as of 17:31, 13 September 2010

A directory of social and political movements related to the P2P (participatory), open (open access to knowledge), and 'commons' paradigms.


Introduction

Marco Berlinguer:

"The free culture movements comprise a wide range of experiences mainly emerging around the internet and the digital revolution. They have generally developed independently, but they are loosely aligned and show a mutually reinforcing dynamism – a ‘viral spiral’, as David Bollier begin_of_the_skype_highlighting end_of_the_skype_highlighting terms it.

All these movements emerged as practical and cultural critiques of the aggressive attempts by corporations, aided by Northern governments, to extend intellectual property rights to knowledge, culture, information, communication and even organisms and data. The process has been described as ‘the second enclosures movement’ – the first being the enclosing of common land and turning it into private property in late and post-medieval England.

Following Felix Stalder, we can group these movements into three different clusters:

  1. Benjamin Mako Hill explains the Difference between the Free Software and Free Culture Movement
  2. Conflicts in open source discourse: review of idea currents in the free and open source software movement.
  3. David Bollier: Is the Commons a movement?

Sister Organizations

The following are most similar in intent:

Key Movements

The 'Open' Paradigm

Key Movements supporting the Open paradigm

Specialized movements

Open Education

Open Money

Open Software

Open Standards

The P2P/Participative Paradigm

Key P2P/Participative Movements

Cooperation/Collaboration

Participative Political Movements

Alternative Political Economy

The Commons Paradigm

Key Resources

Key Articles

  1. David M. Berry, 2004. “The Contestation of Code: A preliminary investigation into the discourse of the free/libre and open source movement,” Critical Discourse Studies, volume 1, number 1 (April), pp. 65–89 [1]
  2. Benjamin Mako Hill, 2005. “Towards a standard of freedom: Creative Commons and the Free Software Movement,” [2]
  3. The Politics of the Libre Commons by David M. Berry and Giles Moss

First Monday, volume 11, number 9 [3]

  1. On the Convergence of social movements to fight IPRs on information in various fields: 10 contributions

Pages in category "Movements"

The following 200 pages are in this category, out of 3,681 total.

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