Bibliography for the Global Political Economy: Difference between revisions
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'''Source:''' | |||
Original title: P2P, THE COMMONS AND THE CRITIC OF GLOBAL POLITICAL ECONOMY | Original title: P2P, THE COMMONS AND THE CRITIC OF GLOBAL POLITICAL ECONOMY | ||
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=Bibliography: P2P, THE COMMONS AND THE CRITIC OF GLOBAL POLITICAL ECONOMY= | = Bibliography: P2P, THE COMMONS AND THE CRITIC OF GLOBAL POLITICAL ECONOMY= | ||
== | == Peer Producing a Commons Pool of Emancipatory Analysis == | ||
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== | == UNDERSTANDING THE WORLD == | ||
=== World Historical Structures of Global Capitalism === | === World Historical Structures of Global Capitalism === | ||
| Line 125: | Line 123: | ||
=== | === The Production and the Labour === | ||
* Internationalization and Transnationalsiation of Production | * Internationalization and Transnationalsiation of Production | ||
| Line 146: | Line 144: | ||
=== | === Agency, Subjectivity, Collective Action === | ||
* Transnational Capitalist Class | * Transnational Capitalist Class | ||
| Line 173: | Line 171: | ||
=== | === Complexity, Crisis, and Structural Change === | ||
| Line 196: | Line 194: | ||
=== Transition, P2P, and the Commons === | |||
'''The Earth System and Cosmos''' | |||
'''Ecologies of Change''' | |||
'''Production, Conservation, and Access to the Commons''' | |||
'''De-commodification and Commonsification (Commonification)''' | |||
== CHANGING THE WORLD == | |||
=== Future Scenarios === | |||
==== P2P Theory: Bauwens, Commons Transition Plans ==== | |||
==== Neo-Gramscian Projections for future World Orders ==== | |||
==== Accelerationist Rapture ==== | |||
==== Zapatismo Urbano, Bio-Regional Mutual Aid Societies ==== | |||
=== Commons-P2P Based Transition Perspectives === | |||
==== Global Collaborative Commons ==== | |||
==== Bio-regional Governance of the Commons ==== | |||
==== Commune of Europe: Post-Autonomous, Post-Workerist and Euro-Communist Perspective ==== | |||
==== CSG, P2P Foundation and Commons Transition ==== | |||
==== Global Villages, resilient communities, transition towns ==== | |||
=== Community projects, networks and alternative building === | |||
==== Open knowledge, self-learning and science ==== | |||
==== FLOSS projects ==== | |||
==== Online creation communities ==== | |||
==== Peer production, distribution and consumption ==== | |||
==== Co-working spaces ==== | |||
==== Co-living spaces ==== | |||
==== Fab-labs ==== | |||
==== Maker Spaces ==== | |||
==== Democratic self-governance ==== | |||
==== Workers owned cooperative communities ==== | |||
=== Movements, NGOs, unions, parties: Putting alternatives in global action === | |||
==== Uprisings, Forums and assemblies ==== | |||
===== Arab Spring ===== | |||
===== Occupy ===== | |||
===== 15M ===== | |||
===== Gezi ===== | |||
=== Autonomous urban-rural community nets === | |||
==== Squatters net ==== | |||
==== Transition towns ==== | |||
==== Global villages ==== | |||
==== Political Parties ==== | |||
===== European Left Party: Podemos, Syriza, De Link, Communist Re-foundation,.. ===== | |||
===== European Greens: Green Parties ===== | |||
==== Progressive NGO and CSOs ==== | |||
===== P2P Foundation ===== | |||
===== Corporate Europe Observatory ===== | |||
===== Transnational Institute ===== | |||
===== On the Commons ===== | |||
==== NGO, CSO, Union, Left Party Think-tanks Networks ==== | |||
===== ATTAC ==== | |||
===== Seattle to Brussels ===== | |||
===== Our World is Not for Sale ===== | |||
===== Friends of the Earth ===== | |||
===== Transform ===== | |||
==== Networked Platforms of Party, Union, CSOs, and NGOs, Think-tanks ==== | |||
===== Alter-Summit ===== | |||
===== Blockupy ===== | |||
==== Broader Convergence and Networking Spaces ==== | |||
- DeGrowth | - DeGrowth | ||
Revision as of 11:32, 12 January 2015
Source:
Original title: P2P, THE COMMONS AND THE CRITIC OF GLOBAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
Proposed and developed by Örsan Şenalp.
Bibliography: P2P, THE COMMONS AND THE CRITIC OF GLOBAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
Peer Producing a Commons Pool of Emancipatory Analysis
Since the previous global crisis, which had triggered the launch of global neoliberal restructuring known as Globalisation in the late 60s, there have been major contributions made from critical perspectives to understand the expansion 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 and the Center. Taken the first and second generation classical work of those like Karl Marx, Rosa Luxemburg, Karl Kautsky, Rudolf Hilferding, Vladimir I. Lenin, Bukharin, Peter Kropotkin, Karl Polanyi, Antonio Gramsci, third and forth generation classics came out in this period. Althusser, Foucoult, Lefebvre, Balibar, De Bord, Deleuze, Miliband, Poulantzas, Palloix, Murray, Hymer, Wallerstein, Amin, Arrighi, Baran, Sweezy, Breverman, Tronti, Negri, Verno, Cox, van der Pijl, Waterman among many others have re-worked on the state, classes, production, labour, capital, power, ideology, agency, and so forth, and had added new insights to make a common sense of the ever changing world historical structures, the collective social agency, as well as possiblities and limits for radical emancipatory change. In this post-war and New-Left era, both Gramsci and Polanyi had been rediscovered and their work stimulated, especially by Poulantzas’ work, the development of varying analysess of the transnational dimension of the changing character of capitalism.
This fourth generation, and their students, have spent precious attention on the TNCs, internationalization of the capital, the state and the classes on the one hand, and the increasingly dominating role of information and knowledge in the current shifts in the world of production and labour, in relation to the dynamic structural forces currently at work. Amongst the third generation theorists, Robert W. Cox was one of those who successfully synthesized insights taken from first, second and third generation theories. He renewed and applied Gramsci and Poulantzas’ concepts and ways of thinking on power and counter-power, so that it become possible to developed a transnational and trans-level systematic critique of political economy from the level of production to inter-state system. After serving long time as an ILO expert, Cox became academic at Colombia University and delivered his seminal articles thourhg which the introduced the ‘Gramscian Turn’ in socal theory, to the International Relations discipline. His first articles published, in Millennium Journal of International Studies in the early 80s, paved a way for the emergence of critical globalization of political economy as an attempt to recover the gap between artificially alienated and disciplined fields of scientific inquiry. Cox successfully translated basic concepts of Gramsci, like hegemony, historic bloc, passive revolution, so on to the world level. This innovation broke a ground not only in Rrealism-Liberlism dominated mainstream IR. With his book, the Production, Power and World Orders: Social Forces in the Making of History came out in 1987, Cox developed his original concepts as state-society complex, internationalization of production, internationalization of state, and international class formation, based on empirical facts. The implementation of historical materialist method to the analysis of transnational relations in this book has been a great contribution to the major debates especially on the state, the capital, and labour, as well as later debates as globalization and global governance. Since then the work of Cox and his close followers as Stephan Gill and Mark Rupert, as well as theoretical and research innovations by Kees van der Pijl, Henk Overbeek, Otto Holman in Europe, has bridged the seperate islands of IR to the debates and reseach in other fileds of social sciences. This strand is known today as Neo-Gramscian critical global or international political eonomy. As those other innovations we will mention below this strand too based their analysis on the critique of the earlier and current theories of Post-Fordism, inspired by regulation school Aglietta, Boyer, Lipietz, Jessop. While doing so, they did erspond Robin Murrey's criticque of isolating of incquiry by either focusing on the state or the capital, as in the analyses Palloix'did on the accumulation or as in the famous Poulantzas-Miliband State debate. Responding Murray's warning the primary objective of Neo-Gramsicans was to anaylse state-society complexes and class formation processes in dynamic-moving and trans-level context of world historical structures. In order to do so, they have developed what is called transnational historical materialst method, that takes dialectics of the agency-structure serious and develops the pespective of internationalization or transnationalization of production by critical re-eveluation of the methodological nationalism of the regulationist post-fordism theories.
On the other hand, other very important analyses and innovations have been made by critical social theorists, or others known as neo-, open-, post- Marxist, post-structuralist, as well as theorists, thinkers, and researchers associated with political strands as Trostkysm, Situationism, Autonomism, Workerism and Anarchism. Amongst these of course comes Habermas, Chomsky, Touraine, Zizek, Castells, Gorz, Hist, Thompson, Tronti, Verno, Negri, Bifo, so on so forth. Amongst these strands, which includes the Regulationists and their critics, there emerged other innovative inquiry towards the subjectiviy and agency. While post- or non- structuralist, Anarchist, Autonomist and Workerist, perspectives left out the study of capital-state-society hence class dimensions, they did developed an creative and insightful analsis that can shed light on the class formation processes at the molecular level. So while the commons understading on role of collective identities, gender, ethnicity, so on out plays in the compex system of social-individual, others have developed theories and research on social-space and time, like Lefebvre and De Bord, communication theorists where, how, and through wihch molecular processes consituting formation of social structures and classes, out plays and bridge the inner- and intra- relationships between reflective-social organisms as part of net of soical relationships at the meso level. Then there were those further developed insifghts with findings in the fiels of technology, science, environment, and we could have develop a broad commons repertuar that allows today us to make better sense of the forces and relations of production, especially on the impact of communication, information and transportation technologies and networks. For instance Castell's, Beck's, and Dickens', work on ICTs and network effect did brake a ground in the 90s as well as the work of Autonoists and Workeris strands. Hardt and Negri delivered their magnum opus ‘the Empire’, just before 9/11, and debate and exhcange srapked out of closed circles, in parallel to worsenin crises and emerging new wars. Empired was followed by the Multitude and the Commonwealth, exchanegs intensified. In our view Empire constituted controversial and comprehensive post-disciplinary and post-structural 'global political economy' analysis, and when studying the changes currently taking place at the production level, successfully identified the potential and actual power of the emerging new productive forces, as well as the future tendencies, towards rising of networked power relationships within the production processes and beyond, over power structures at state and world order levels. In this sense the work of Hardt and Negri was producing an analysis similar to that of Cox', yet without being informed by the accumulated work in the field now called critical global political economy. Probably because of the controversies emerged around the post-modernity of the Empire, the research and the theory at the critical global political economy front remained immune to the innovation and insights coming from this latter strand. In a sense, Empire, Multitude and Commonwealth was turning point from Autonomy, and Workerism, to Post-Autonomy and Post-Workerism, becasue of ts re-engagement with the State, the Capital and the Ruling.. Classes. Thus, it was also post-post-structuralism. However, Empire and the perspectives, debates and research around it has included very limited empirical analysis of the relationship between its original approaches on networked subjectivity, the comons, peer prodiction, so on and the catagories of the theories of transnationalization (of production, capital, state and class formation processes), and more importantly on the inter and intra-class struggles re-emerging in the 90s. The ‘Empire’ however has accelerated the theorisation of networked collaborative social relatioships, peer production, and commons thinking and practice, which bears major importance for the emancipatory collective action. This theorisation there, sheds more lights, also based on the critiue of the Post-Fordism, by focusing on the informationalisation and cognitive aspects of the change in the late 20th and early 21st century capitalism. It provides insights on how informatics has been transforming the key relationships in the capitalist mode mode of production, and triggering its terminal crisies, from the patterns of production to ownership, from distribution to consumption. Which provides deeper understanding about how to make sense of the class formation and struggle processes for labour in broader society and social struggles level, for instance of the role of informatics and cybernetics both as base of increasing structural power of the ruling classes. Also about how emerging mode of informational production, provided material, ideational and institutional foundation of the global financial architecture, being entangled woth transnational modular commodity-production networks built on ICTs how other modes of production that are existing in agriculture, trade, industry and services at regional, national and local levels across the world are being incorporated in a new labour division and hierarchy. However empirically and theoretically thin understanding of the trans-formation of social classes, states and inter-state system, in this front, or a historical and materialist understanding of transnational social relations, and global systemic change, creates an important gap.
Therefore, critical global political economy theory started with Cox, Gill and Van der Pijl, and developed by people like Overbeek, Holman, Carroll, Van Apeldoorn, Harris, Robinson, on the one hand and informational cognitive capitalism theories catalyzed by the work of Negri, Bifo, Castells and taken up by the most recent generation of thinkers like Lazzarato, Boutang, de Angelis, Lovink, Nossiter, Huws, Bauwens, Terranova, Pasquinelli, Kleiner, Fusch, Rigi among many others, would benefit from a fruitful exchange. Potentially a p2p-commons update on the understanding of the 'transnationalization of production', which as process overlaps with the informatization of economy, networkisation of societies, and neoliberal globalization offensive, and vice versa; a global political economy upgrade for the latter theories, in our opinion, is urgently needed. Such an exchange would provide much more clear understanding over the complexity of global power structures, states, classes, the power and weaknesses of partnerships and alliances between capital and the state elite which creates divisions & scarcities among masses, using the structural power they hols, to rule and take advantage of the human societies. Such clear understanding would help to level the field at least for a bit, opening up broader possibilities to build up more efficient alternatives, creative and assertive counter strategies that would eventually mobilize more people to take initiative of their own lives, diminish all sort of alienation in and between their societies, and favor themselves and other peoples globally.
Departing from the above we are inviting peer producers and commoners alike to join us to peer produce a commons knowledge resource that will include text books, articles, audio, video and other sorts of digital material that will help us to address and broaden the needed dialogue between critical social theories on p2p, commons and global political economy on the other, and the political and cultural praxis towards emancipatory commons transitions that will allow humanity to go beyond the vision promised by capitalisms, while avoiding the worse like fascisms and wars to dominate the planet and destroy more lives. Believeing that it became by now cyristal clear that the humanity is passing through yet another world historical passage of which one side is dark and fearful: Deepening systemic crises, serious threats of regional and global wars, normalisation of extreme right and religious fundamentalisms, as well as natural and human disasters, all caused by the current mode of production. Yet the other side is bright and hopeful: Where the emergence of the new become clear in the realities and practices of the p2p and the commons, which by now proven themselves as not only concepts but also practices that they are bearing 'the seeds of the new' potential forms to constitute, what Marx referred as the 'associated mode of production' -more then one and a half century ago; while they also promise possibility for creation of what Kropotkin and Buchkin thought as 'communal mutual aid society' -in the previous century, yet to be created and consolidated collectively by painful efforts and struggle. Therefore encouraging all those who are interested and can contribute in this special collaborative project through which we want to develop structured and systematic pool of pedagogical material as base for free access self- and floss- high level remote emancipatory education activities orgniased by anyone who wishes. In order to make an entry please register to the P2P-Foundation's wiki page and make sure that your entries comes under the relevant section, and you applied a similar format used for the materials placed on the wiki before you. Let' s join efforts and enrich this pool of emancipatory knowledge and analyses, that can be useful for understanding and the changing the word through commons assertive and constructive actions for fair, just, peaceful and beautiful world where life, equality, freedom, and joy can flourish and thrive for a commons humanity. For any questions and support you can send an email at: networkedlabour [at] networg [dot] nl
UNDERSTANDING THE WORLD
World Historical Structures of Global Capitalism
Transnational and Global Capitalism
Neo-Gramscian Theory
Robinson and Harris
Cognitive Capitalism
Yann Moulier Boutang
Verno
Negri
Informational Capitalism
Castells
Exchange, polemic, critics, syntheses
Harvey: New Imperialism
Wallterstein et. al.: The Capitalist World System theorists
Panitch, Gindin, Petras: American Empire
Callinicos, Morton-Bieler, et.al.: Uneven and Combined Development perspectives
Fuchs: Transnational Informational Capitalism
Holmes: Neoliberal Informationalism
Wark: Vectrocal Capitalism
Bauwens and Kostakis: Netarchical Capitalism
The State and the Inter-State System
Internationalization and Transnationalisiation of the State
Global Governance and Transnational State
Empire
Hardt & Negri
Network State
Center / Semi-periphery and Varieties of Capitalism
Exchange, polemic and critics
The Value and the Capital
Internationalization and Transnationalisation of Capital
Cognitive, Informational, Networked Capital
Global Financial Architecture
New International Labour Division
- Hirst and Thompson
Global Commodity / Supply / Value Chains
- Dickens
Feminist and Ecology Perspectives'
Exchange, polemic and critics
The Production and the Labour
- Internationalization and Transnationalsiation of Production
- Transnational Modular Production-Commodity Networks
Agency, Subjectivity, Collective Action
- Transnational Capitalist Class
- Netarchical Class
- Precariat, [Cybertariat]], Cogniteriat
- New Middle Class, Enterprenual Class
- New Labour and Global Working Class
- New Social Network Movements
- New Social Network Movement Unionism
- New Cooperativism
- New Internationalism
- Exchange, polemic and critics
Complexity, Crisis, and Structural Change
- Power and Hegemony
- Civil Society and Space
- Culture, Ideology
- Media and Communication
- Science and Technology
- Singularity, Meta-data
- Surveillance, Fascism
- Geo-politics, War
- Revolution, Reform
Transition, P2P, and the Commons
The Earth System and Cosmos
Ecologies of Change
Production, Conservation, and Access to the Commons
De-commodification and Commonsification (Commonification)
CHANGING THE WORLD
Future Scenarios
P2P Theory: Bauwens, Commons Transition Plans
Neo-Gramscian Projections for future World Orders
Accelerationist Rapture
Zapatismo Urbano, Bio-Regional Mutual Aid Societies
Commons-P2P Based Transition Perspectives
Global Collaborative Commons
Bio-regional Governance of the Commons
Commune of Europe: Post-Autonomous, Post-Workerist and Euro-Communist Perspective
CSG, P2P Foundation and Commons Transition
Global Villages, resilient communities, transition towns
Community projects, networks and alternative building
Open knowledge, self-learning and science
FLOSS projects
Online creation communities
Peer production, distribution and consumption
Co-working spaces
Co-living spaces
Fab-labs
Maker Spaces
Democratic self-governance
Workers owned cooperative communities
Movements, NGOs, unions, parties: Putting alternatives in global action
Uprisings, Forums and assemblies
Arab Spring
Occupy
15M
Gezi
Autonomous urban-rural community nets
Squatters net
Transition towns
Global villages
Political Parties
European Left Party: Podemos, Syriza, De Link, Communist Re-foundation,..
European Greens: Green Parties
Progressive NGO and CSOs
P2P Foundation
Corporate Europe Observatory
Transnational Institute
On the Commons
NGO, CSO, Union, Left Party Think-tanks Networks
= ATTAC
Seattle to Brussels
Our World is Not for Sale
Friends of the Earth
Transform
Networked Platforms of Party, Union, CSOs, and NGOs, Think-tanks
Alter-Summit
Blockupy
Broader Convergence and Networking Spaces
- DeGrowth
- Economics and the Commons
- Chaos Computer Congress
- World Social Forum
- World Forum of Alternatives
Reading List
M. Castells,
C. Fusch,
J. Rigi,
B. Holmes,
G. Lovink,
N. Rossiter,
M. Berlinguer,
P. Moore,
G. Dafermos,
P. Gerbaudo,
F. Stalder
B. van Apeldoorn
R. W. Cox,
S. Gill,
H. Overbeek,
O. Hollman
W.I. Robinson,
K. vad der Pijl
W. Carroll
P. Waterman
B. Guiterrez
M.F. Morell
The Dramatic Rise of Peer-to-Peer Communication within the emancipatory movements Reflections of an International Labour, Social Justice and Cyber Activist [ https://www.academia.edu/7358045/The_Dramatic_Rise_of_Peer-to-Peer_Communication_within_the_emancipatory_movements_Reflections_of_an_International_Labour_Social_Justice_and_Cyber_Activist]
Transnational Networks of Radical Labour Research and (H)acktivism by Örsan Şenalp and Mehmet Gürsan Şenalp, forthcoming in 2015 [1]