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You will probably want to read the [[Help:Contents|help pages]]. | You will probably want to read the [[Help:Contents|help pages]]. | ||
Again, welcome and have fun! Kevin Flanagan 19:34, 2 January 2015 (UTC) | Again, welcome and have fun! Kevin Flanagan 19:34, 2 January 2015 (UTC) | ||
== Introduction to the Critique of Global Political Economy: A P2P Theory of Everything? == | |||
'''1. A Theoretical Starting Point''' | |||
''Thinking of 'peer production' and 'transnationalization of production' together'' | |||
Since the previous global crisis, that had started in the late 60s, there have been major contributions made from critical perspectives to our understanding of the expanding of capitalist mode of production and the formation of the world market. Much of the insights were developed by political economy theorists from the West/Center. The first and second generation classics written were those of Karl Marx, Rosa Luxemburg, Karl Kautsky, Rudolf Hilferding, Vladimir I. Lenin, Bukharin, Karl Polanyi, Georg Lukacs and Antonio Gramsci. The third generation classical works has arrived in this period. Althusser, Balibar, Miliband, Poulantzas, Palloix, Murray, Hymer, Wallerstein, Amin, Arrighi, Baran, Sweezy, Breverman among others have reopened and expanded the analysis of the state, classes, capitalism. In this post-war and New-Left era, both Gramsci and Polanyi had been rediscovered and their work stimulated -especially via Poulantzas’ analysis- the development of the analysis of the transnational dimension of the changing capitalism. | |||
The fourth generation spent precious attention spent on the TNCs, and internationalization of the capital, state and classes. Within this generation theorists the work of Robert W. Cox was the one who could actually successfully synthesized the first, second and third generation theories while revaluing Gramsci -as well as Poulantzas’ way of thinking of power and counterpower- in developing a transnational and trans-level analysis. After serving long time as an ILO expert, Cox became an academic in Colombia University and delivered his seminal articles which introduced the ‘Gramscian turn’ in IR academic discussion, These first articles published in Millenium Journal of International Studies in the early 80s, in a way opened a way also open the way for the ‘globalisation of political economy’. These articles were successfully translating the basic concepts of Gramsci (like hegemony, historic bloc) to the international level. Such innovation broke a ground in realist IR dominated 'discipline'. Production, Power and World Orders: Social Forces in the Making of History came out in 1987. Cox has developed his original concepts like state-society complex, internationalisation of production, internationalisation of state, and international class formation, The implementation of historical materialist method to the analysis of transnational relations in the book has been a great contribution to the major debates on the state, classes and globalisation. Cox work has later developed by theorists like Kees van der Pijl, Stephen Gill, Henk Overbeek, Otto Holman. This strand is known today as Neo-Gramscian global political economy perspective. Neo-Gramscian theorists have based their analysis of internationalisation or transnationalization of production on the earlier and current theories of 'post-fordism' inspired by regulation school (Aglietta, Boyer, Lipietz, Jessop). | |||
On the other hand, there has also been important analyses made by critical social theorists -most can be named as post-Marxist- like Habermas, Touraine, Castells, Gorz, Hist & Thompson etc., and Italian Autonomist Marxist tradition, on the new developments in forces and relations of production, like the impact of communication and transportation technologies, networks, informalisation, TNCs so on. Based on this latter strand fInally Hardt and Negri had been delivering their magnum opus: ‘Empire’, which can be tagged as a comprehensive postdisciplinary global political economy analysis. The Empire, when argues on production successfully identified the link between the new productive forces, rising networked relationships within the production processes, power structures and the new world order. However the work of Hardt and Negri was actually achieving what Cox could have done, without being informed by the accumulated work in the global political economy field. Thus it has included very limited empirical analysis of the relationship between networks and transnationalization of production. The ‘Empire’ however has accelerated an intriguing theorisation of peer production, p2p relationships and networks; This theorisation we think, sheds much better perspective on the post fordist, cognitive capitalism. How informatics has been transforming the key relationships of capitalist mode mode of production, from production to ownership, from distribution to consumption. That provides deeper understanding (than Post-fordism based theories) of how informatics based structural power of transnational capital, via global financial architecture, subordinated agriculture, trade, industry and services in every localities and regions in the world. Yet empirically thin understanding of global political economy in this front, or a historical and materialist understanding of transnational social relations, especially those of related to production, creates an important gap. | |||
Thus global political economy theory started with Cox, and p2p theory would benefit from a fruitful exchange. Potentially a p2p update on the understanding of the 'transnationalization of production', which as process overlaps with the informatization of economy, networkisation of societies, and neoliberal globalisation offensive, or vice versa; a global political economy upgrade for p2p theory, in my opinion is necessary. Such an exchange would provide much more clear understanding of global power structures, the capital and state elite partnerships that creates divisions & scarcities among masses in order to rule and take advantage of the societies, and possibilities to build up more efficient alternatives and counter strategies that would eventually diminish all sort of alienations in and between societies and favour the people globally. | |||
''Reading List:'' | |||
P2P, Transnational, Informational, Global Capitalism, New Imperialsim,... | |||
'''2. What purpose and who is theory for, Community, Commons, Cosmos or Capital and Control?''' | |||
Meta-Theoretical and Philisophical Concrete-Simple as the Departure Point: Can we collectively make of the matter, energy, space-time, life, consciousness, production, power, world orders, civilizations and all the other things within one single unified field? | |||
*'''Epistemology, Ontology and Methodology of Control and Socialisation''' | |||
Problem Solving Theories | |||
The Science of Control: Cybernetics, Complex Systems, and Neoliberal Governmentality | |||
Integral Theory: Weber | |||
Hounting the Theory of Everything: Kaku, Lisi, Hawking | |||
Californian Singularity: Kurzweil | |||
*'''Epistemology, Ontology and Methodology of Emancipaton''' | |||
Critical Theories: Dialectics, Tektology, or Social-Cybernetics? | |||
Dialectic and histrical materialism: Hegel, Marx, Bogdanov, Renner, Adorno, Seve, Lefebvre, Deleuze, Ollman, Zizek, Wark, Fusch | |||
Critical Realism and Critical Integralism: | |||
Epistemological and onotlogical problem: | |||
Vedic Science, unified fields, theory of everything | |||
Roger Penrose and Ouantum-cognition | |||
Real Critical History of World Civilizations- from Etruks, Alexandria, Atlantis, Fenike, .. Marcel vd Linden | |||
Reading list: | |||
Theodore Adorno | |||
Robert W. Cox | |||
*'''Moral, Existential, and Civilizational Problematic''' | |||
Hardware and software solutions towards constituting absolute control and socialization | |||
Internet of Everything vs. Internet of Things | |||
Quantum computing | |||
Smart cities, quantified me! | |||
Gnome, Brain, CERN,... | |||
'''3. Transition Perspectives for Commons, P2P, Participatory or Collaborative Societies''' | |||
Jeremy Rifkin's, Global Collaborative Commons Consultancy | |||
Michael Aalberts, Parecon, IOPS | |||
Commons Transition Perspectives: CSG, On the Commons, P2P-Foundation (M. Buwens and V. Kostakis) | |||
Eureopan Communist Vision? Transform, Podemos, Syriza, De Link,... Blockupy, Commune of Europa (Blockupy, Uhm Ganze, and some italian and Spanish Post-Autonomist and Accelerationist groups) | |||
- Catalan Integral Cooperatives and Faircoop | |||
'''4. Unified Emancipatory Praxis''' | |||
*'''Academic, theory, debate, and research''' | |||
Cognitive capitalism: Boutang, Bauwens, | |||
Autonomist-Workerist: Empire, multitude, commons, and accelerationism: Negri, Pasquinelli, Dyer-witeword, Terranova, Riggerrio, Bifo, Holloway | |||
Informational transnational capitalism: C. Fusch, B. Holmes, J. Rigi,.. | |||
Critical GPE: R.W. Cox, Gill, Kees, Otto, Henk, Bastiaan van Apeldoorn,... | |||
P2P Theory: Michel Bauwens, Kostakis, J. Rigi, | |||
Social theory and Marxism: Callinicos, Harvey, Zizek, Huws, Wainwright | |||
New Labour and Internationalism: Peter W. | |||
*'''Community projects and p2p networks''' | |||
Emancipatory praxis of advanced world civilization building: | |||
p2p self-learning through open universal science and philosophy, yoga, trans. meditation | |||
Transnational and global production and distribution networks | |||
Peoples' Internet of Everything | |||
Transnational and global democratic self-governance | |||
Transnational and transversal mass non-violent direct-action / design | |||
*'''Political praxis: Activism, networks, movements, NGOs, unions, parties''' | |||
Liberation and protection of tacit knowledge and building global constructive collective action to assert existing and growing emancipatory projects and processes | |||
Revision as of 20:01, 4 January 2015
Welcome to P2P Foundation! We hope you will contribute much and well. You will probably want to read the help pages. Again, welcome and have fun! Kevin Flanagan 19:34, 2 January 2015 (UTC)
Introduction to the Critique of Global Political Economy: A P2P Theory of Everything?
1. A Theoretical Starting Point
Thinking of 'peer production' and 'transnationalization of production' together
Since the previous global crisis, that had started in the late 60s, there have been major contributions made from critical perspectives to our understanding of the expanding of capitalist mode of production and the formation of the world market. Much of the insights were developed by political economy theorists from the West/Center. The first and second generation classics written were those of Karl Marx, Rosa Luxemburg, Karl Kautsky, Rudolf Hilferding, Vladimir I. Lenin, Bukharin, Karl Polanyi, Georg Lukacs and Antonio Gramsci. The third generation classical works has arrived in this period. Althusser, Balibar, Miliband, Poulantzas, Palloix, Murray, Hymer, Wallerstein, Amin, Arrighi, Baran, Sweezy, Breverman among others have reopened and expanded the analysis of the state, classes, capitalism. In this post-war and New-Left era, both Gramsci and Polanyi had been rediscovered and their work stimulated -especially via Poulantzas’ analysis- the development of the analysis of the transnational dimension of the changing capitalism.
The fourth generation spent precious attention spent on the TNCs, and internationalization of the capital, state and classes. Within this generation theorists the work of Robert W. Cox was the one who could actually successfully synthesized the first, second and third generation theories while revaluing Gramsci -as well as Poulantzas’ way of thinking of power and counterpower- in developing a transnational and trans-level analysis. After serving long time as an ILO expert, Cox became an academic in Colombia University and delivered his seminal articles which introduced the ‘Gramscian turn’ in IR academic discussion, These first articles published in Millenium Journal of International Studies in the early 80s, in a way opened a way also open the way for the ‘globalisation of political economy’. These articles were successfully translating the basic concepts of Gramsci (like hegemony, historic bloc) to the international level. Such innovation broke a ground in realist IR dominated 'discipline'. Production, Power and World Orders: Social Forces in the Making of History came out in 1987. Cox has developed his original concepts like state-society complex, internationalisation of production, internationalisation of state, and international class formation, The implementation of historical materialist method to the analysis of transnational relations in the book has been a great contribution to the major debates on the state, classes and globalisation. Cox work has later developed by theorists like Kees van der Pijl, Stephen Gill, Henk Overbeek, Otto Holman. This strand is known today as Neo-Gramscian global political economy perspective. Neo-Gramscian theorists have based their analysis of internationalisation or transnationalization of production on the earlier and current theories of 'post-fordism' inspired by regulation school (Aglietta, Boyer, Lipietz, Jessop).
On the other hand, there has also been important analyses made by critical social theorists -most can be named as post-Marxist- like Habermas, Touraine, Castells, Gorz, Hist & Thompson etc., and Italian Autonomist Marxist tradition, on the new developments in forces and relations of production, like the impact of communication and transportation technologies, networks, informalisation, TNCs so on. Based on this latter strand fInally Hardt and Negri had been delivering their magnum opus: ‘Empire’, which can be tagged as a comprehensive postdisciplinary global political economy analysis. The Empire, when argues on production successfully identified the link between the new productive forces, rising networked relationships within the production processes, power structures and the new world order. However the work of Hardt and Negri was actually achieving what Cox could have done, without being informed by the accumulated work in the global political economy field. Thus it has included very limited empirical analysis of the relationship between networks and transnationalization of production. The ‘Empire’ however has accelerated an intriguing theorisation of peer production, p2p relationships and networks; This theorisation we think, sheds much better perspective on the post fordist, cognitive capitalism. How informatics has been transforming the key relationships of capitalist mode mode of production, from production to ownership, from distribution to consumption. That provides deeper understanding (than Post-fordism based theories) of how informatics based structural power of transnational capital, via global financial architecture, subordinated agriculture, trade, industry and services in every localities and regions in the world. Yet empirically thin understanding of global political economy in this front, or a historical and materialist understanding of transnational social relations, especially those of related to production, creates an important gap.
Thus global political economy theory started with Cox, and p2p theory would benefit from a fruitful exchange. Potentially a p2p update on the understanding of the 'transnationalization of production', which as process overlaps with the informatization of economy, networkisation of societies, and neoliberal globalisation offensive, or vice versa; a global political economy upgrade for p2p theory, in my opinion is necessary. Such an exchange would provide much more clear understanding of global power structures, the capital and state elite partnerships that creates divisions & scarcities among masses in order to rule and take advantage of the societies, and possibilities to build up more efficient alternatives and counter strategies that would eventually diminish all sort of alienations in and between societies and favour the people globally.
Reading List:
P2P, Transnational, Informational, Global Capitalism, New Imperialsim,...
2. What purpose and who is theory for, Community, Commons, Cosmos or Capital and Control?
Meta-Theoretical and Philisophical Concrete-Simple as the Departure Point: Can we collectively make of the matter, energy, space-time, life, consciousness, production, power, world orders, civilizations and all the other things within one single unified field?
- Epistemology, Ontology and Methodology of Control and Socialisation
Problem Solving Theories The Science of Control: Cybernetics, Complex Systems, and Neoliberal Governmentality Integral Theory: Weber Hounting the Theory of Everything: Kaku, Lisi, Hawking Californian Singularity: Kurzweil
- Epistemology, Ontology and Methodology of Emancipaton
Critical Theories: Dialectics, Tektology, or Social-Cybernetics? Dialectic and histrical materialism: Hegel, Marx, Bogdanov, Renner, Adorno, Seve, Lefebvre, Deleuze, Ollman, Zizek, Wark, Fusch Critical Realism and Critical Integralism:
Epistemological and onotlogical problem: Vedic Science, unified fields, theory of everything Roger Penrose and Ouantum-cognition Real Critical History of World Civilizations- from Etruks, Alexandria, Atlantis, Fenike, .. Marcel vd Linden
Reading list: Theodore Adorno Robert W. Cox
- Moral, Existential, and Civilizational Problematic
Hardware and software solutions towards constituting absolute control and socialization Internet of Everything vs. Internet of Things Quantum computing Smart cities, quantified me! Gnome, Brain, CERN,...
3. Transition Perspectives for Commons, P2P, Participatory or Collaborative Societies
Jeremy Rifkin's, Global Collaborative Commons Consultancy Michael Aalberts, Parecon, IOPS Commons Transition Perspectives: CSG, On the Commons, P2P-Foundation (M. Buwens and V. Kostakis) Eureopan Communist Vision? Transform, Podemos, Syriza, De Link,... Blockupy, Commune of Europa (Blockupy, Uhm Ganze, and some italian and Spanish Post-Autonomist and Accelerationist groups) - Catalan Integral Cooperatives and Faircoop
4. Unified Emancipatory Praxis
- Academic, theory, debate, and research
Cognitive capitalism: Boutang, Bauwens, Autonomist-Workerist: Empire, multitude, commons, and accelerationism: Negri, Pasquinelli, Dyer-witeword, Terranova, Riggerrio, Bifo, Holloway Informational transnational capitalism: C. Fusch, B. Holmes, J. Rigi,.. Critical GPE: R.W. Cox, Gill, Kees, Otto, Henk, Bastiaan van Apeldoorn,... P2P Theory: Michel Bauwens, Kostakis, J. Rigi, Social theory and Marxism: Callinicos, Harvey, Zizek, Huws, Wainwright New Labour and Internationalism: Peter W.
- Community projects and p2p networks
Emancipatory praxis of advanced world civilization building: p2p self-learning through open universal science and philosophy, yoga, trans. meditation Transnational and global production and distribution networks Peoples' Internet of Everything Transnational and global democratic self-governance Transnational and transversal mass non-violent direct-action / design
- Political praxis: Activism, networks, movements, NGOs, unions, parties
Liberation and protection of tacit knowledge and building global constructive collective action to assert existing and growing emancipatory projects and processes