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=Bio=
=Bio=


After spending a gap decade travelling and studying independently in
martin has recently withdrawn from cyberspace activities, and lives in reclusion, striving for anonymity.
India and many other places, Martin came to The School of Independent
Studies at Lancaster University in England in 1999. There he completed a
BA in Globalisation & Technology, as well as an MA in Applied Research
and Consultancy: Free Software and Academic Curriculum Development,
before commencing doctoral studies on the political economy and
philosophical foundations of cyberspace. The PhD was funded as part of
an EU 5th Framework Programme Research Project - on "Bioethical
Implications of Globalisation" – which resulted in a thesis on
“Property, Commoning and the Politics of Free Software”. The thesis will
be published as part of a Two Volume Special Issue of the online journal
The Commoner, Autumn 2010.
 
During his time at Lancaster, Martin co-founded the Knowledge Lab - a
series of gatherings bringing together academics, activists, artists and
practitioners in experimental settings to share ideas, knowledge and
skills to further the causes of social movements and support them in
their struggles. From 2006-2008 he worked with indigenous peoples in the
Amazon and the Andes on issues of climate change and the protection of
traditional knowledge and land commons and learned about shamanic politics.
 
Alongside his studies, Martin has co-produced two documentaries: “genova
cittá aperta”, 2002, which reflects on the events that surrounded the G8
meeting in Genova, 2001 and which has been widely shown in community
cinemas and social centres, as well as “DOGS RUN FREE”, 2004, which
provides an analytical perspective on the building of Fortress Europe
and portrays the social movements that have emerged to resist the EU's
migration policies. He is a Free Software user and advocate, who is wary
of technology fetishism. Martin lives in Lancaster, in the sunny North
West England, loves improvised cooking and listening to the ingredients,
and works precariously on a variety of projects, some of which are paid,
some of which are in the university and many of which are unpaid,
commoning projects.
 


=Selected Publications=
=Selected Publications=

Revision as of 06:17, 6 February 2011

J. Martin Pedersen is an independent researcher and activist, co-founder of Knowledge Lab [1], blogging on http://commoning.wordpress.com


Bio

martin has recently withdrawn from cyberspace activities, and lives in reclusion, striving for anonymity.

Selected Publications

  • Pedersen, J.M. (2010) ‘Introduction: Property, Commoning and the Politics of Free Software‘, The Commoner, Special Issue, Volume 14, Winter 2010, 8-48.
  • Pedersen, J.M. (2010) ‘Free Culture in Context: Property and the Politics of Free Software‘, The Commoner, Special Issue, Volume 14, Winter 2010, 49-136.
  • Pedersen, J.M. (2010) ‘Properties of Property: A Jurisprudential Analysis‘, The Commoner, Special Issue, Volume 14, Winter 2010, 137-210.
  • Pedersen, J.M. (2010) ‘Free Software as Property’, The Commoner, Special Issue, Volume 14, Winter 2010, 211-286.
  • Pedersen, J.M. (2010) ‘Conclusion: Property and the Politics of Commoning‘, The Commoner, Special Issue, Volume 14, Winter 2010, 287-294.
  • Pedersen, J. M. (2008) “Property Relations in the Knowledge Economy: In Search of Anti-capitalist Commons” in Mordini, E (ed.) “Ethics and Health in the Global Village – Bioethics, Globalization and Human Rights”. CIC Edizioni Internazionali, Roma.


Selected presentations

  • "Property Imaginaries in Cyberspace Politics", presentation at CPERC-Cesagen-Sociology Workshop on Imaginaries: Theoretical and Empirical Perspectives, Lancaster University, June 2010.
  • “Reflections from the Rain Forest: Property, Politics and Autonomous Development in the Amazon”, invited presentation of field work findings with Nina Moeller at International Centre for Participation Studies, Department of Peace Studies, University of Bradford, November 2008.
  • “Plant Lessons from Free Software: Can the spirit of a plant be protected in the market place?”, paper co-presented with Nina Moeller at the 11th International Congress Of Ethnobiology, June 2008, Cusco, Peru.
  • Sessions prepared and facilitated at "Hack the Knowledge Lab: Technology, Creativity, Social Organisation" at Institute for Advanced Studies, February 3-5, 2006: “Privacy and Surveillance” and “Enclosures and Commons”.
  • “Revisiting the Circumstances of Justice in the light of Free Software: What happened to Society?”, paper presented at A World for All?: the Ethics of Global Civil Society International Conference, School of Divinity, University of Edinburgh, September 2005.
  • “Lessons from Cyberspace: The Free Software movement and the Configuration of Ownership”, paper presented at Imaging Social Movements, Edge Hill College, July 2004.
  • “Free Software and Indymedia”, presentation at Wealth by Copyleft: Creativity in the Digital Age, The 3rd Oekonux Conference, Department of Philosophy, Vienna University, Austria, May 2004.

More Information

J. Martin Pedersen is a participant at the Berlin Commons Conference