Commons, Markets and Democracy: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with " '''* dissertation / Book: Lukas Peter. Democracy, Markets and the Commons: : Towards a Reconciliation of Freedom and Ecology. Political Science | Volume 107, December 2021.''' URL = https://www.researchgate.net/publication/355677260_Democracy_Markets_and_the_Commons_Towards_a_Reconciliation_of_Freedom_and_Ecology ''"This study was accepted as a '''dissertation by the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences at the University of Zurich''' in the fall semester 2017 ." (full-...")
 
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'''* dissertation / Book: Lukas Peter. Democracy, Markets and the Commons: : Towards a Reconciliation of Freedom and Ecology. Political Science | Volume 107, December 2021.'''
'''* dissertation / Book: Lukas Peter. Democracy, Markets and the Commons: : Towards a Reconciliation of Freedom and Ecology. Political Science | Volume 107, December 2021.'''


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==5. An ecological understanding of the commons==
==Chapter 5. An ecological understanding of the commons==


# 5.1 Nature, language and social relations ............................................... 90
# 5.1 Nature, language and social relations ............................................... 90
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==6. Towards a commons theory of property ==
==Chapter 6. Towards a commons theory of property ==


# 6.1 The normative language of goods ................................................. 144
# 6.1 The normative language of goods ................................................. 144
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==7. The role of the state in a commons-creating society ==
==Chapter 7. The role of the state in a commons-creating society ==


# 7.1 Preliminary reflections on the state-commons relationship ........................ 207
# 7.1 Preliminary reflections on the state-commons relationship ........................ 207
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==8. Commons and the market ==
== Chapter 8. Commons and the market ==


# 8.1 The market in commons literature ................................................. 252
# 8.1 The market in commons literature ................................................. 252
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# 8.4 Responses to possible critiques of the market commons ........................... 274
# 8.4 Responses to possible critiques of the market commons ........................... 274


 
[[Category:P2P_State_Approaches]]
[[Category:P2P State Approaches]]
 
[[Category:Commons]]
[[Category:Commons]]

Revision as of 13:11, 19 May 2024

* dissertation / Book: Lukas Peter. Democracy, Markets and the Commons: : Towards a Reconciliation of Freedom and Ecology. Political Science | Volume 107, December 2021.

URL = https://www.researchgate.net/publication/355677260_Democracy_Markets_and_the_Commons_Towards_a_Reconciliation_of_Freedom_and_Ecology

"This study was accepted as a dissertation by the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences at the University of Zurich in the fall semester 2017 ." (full-text version by transcript Verlag)


Contents

Excerpted from the ToC:

Chapter 3: Garrett Hardin’s tragedy of the unregulated commons

3.1 The tragedy: maximization strategies and the double C–double P game

3.2 Social institutions against tragedy: privatism or socialism ........................... 48


Chapter 4. Overcoming the tragedy with the Ostroms

  1. 4.1 Collective action and “grim” social dilemmas ........................................ 52
  2. 4.2 The tragedy of monocentric orders ................................................. 54
  3. 4.3 The tragedy of privatization and the market......................................... 57
  4. 4.4 Overcoming tragedy through collective action ...................................... 70
  5. 4.5 Self-governing commons with the aid of eight design principles ..................... 75
  6. 4.6 Institutional diversity and polycentricity.............................................. 81
  7. 4.7 Interim conclusion.................................................................. 85


Chapter 5. An ecological understanding of the commons

  1. 5.1 Nature, language and social relations ............................................... 90
  2. 5.2 Concepts of nature and social reality................................................ 93
  3. 5.3 Autopoiesis and the interdependent co-creation of reality .......................... 100
  4. 5.4 Ecosystems, abundance and natural commons .................................... 106
  5. 5.5 Empathy, cooperation and a common(s) reality ..................................... 115
  6. 5.6 Ecological freedom, democracy and care............................................ 119
  7. 5.7 The civic tradition of ecological democracy and commoning ........................ 130


Chapter 6. Towards a commons theory of property

  1. 6.1 The normative language of goods ................................................. 144
  2. 6.2 Common needs, common resources and common property ......................... 148
  3. 6.3 Reinterpreting John Locke’s theory of property from a commons perspective ....... 155
  4. 6.4 Predistribution: commons in a property-owning democracy ........................ 180
  5. 6.5. Consumption goods: individual or common property? .............................. 194
  6. 6.6 Interim conclusion................................................................. 205


Chapter 7. The role of the state in a commons-creating society

  1. 7.1 Preliminary reflections on the state-commons relationship ........................ 207
  2. 7.1. Varieties of the state and the role of the commons .................................210
  3. 7.2 Public goods versus state-supported commons:...............................216
  4. 7.4 Creating commons in a non-ideal world – in and against the state .................. 239


Chapter 8. Commons and the market

  1. 8.1 The market in commons literature ................................................. 252
  2. 8.2 Enclosing commons and opening markets ......................................... 256
  3. 8.3 The market as a commons......................................................... 260
  4. 8.4 Responses to possible critiques of the market commons ........................... 274