P2P Public Intellectuals

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Context

A list of people oriented towards thinking about a sharing, commons, p2p oriented society.

For a cooperative publishing project with Shareable.

We aim to interview two people per month, with possible publication of interview book.



Introduction

Note from initial compiler Michel Bauwens:

Please note, a lot of people whom I find very interesting are not in here, because I or they do not necessarily see their work as part of this particular emergence and they belong to different paths. Also active activists who do not necessarily participate in the intellectual elaboration of p2p ideas are not included in this list. This list should in no way be seen as a list of approval or a select club to whom you do not belong. It is merely meant as a guide to find people with interesting ideas.

Thanks for suggesting names, and rationales for adding them.


Directory

  • part of a general dialogue on the construction of a p2p world
    • associated in some fashion with our work at the P2P Foundation


Public Intellectuals

  1. Amelia Andersdotter, Pirate Party, Sweden
  2. Adam Arvidsson **, on the ethical economy, http://p2pfoundation.net/Special:Search?search=%22Adam+Arvidsson%22&fulltext=Search
  3. Michel Bauwens **, P2P Theory, founder of P2P Foundation; Bibliography of Michel Bauwens
  4. Yochai Benkler *, legal scholar, author of the classic study of Peer Production, i.e. the Wealth of Networks
  5. David Bollier **, author of Viral Spiral, foremost commons scholar, now working on emerging Commons Law framework
  6. James Boyle, against IP enclosures
  7. Rachel Botsman *, on sharing infrastructures and access via product-service systems
  8. Arthur Brock, Open Money, USA
  9. Marvin Brown ** , Civilizing the Economy, on civic economics, http://www.shareable.net/blog/enriching-the-commons-marvin-browns-economics-of-provision
  10. Axel Bruns, theorizing Produsage
  11. Chris Carlsson *, Nowtopia, on local productive economic associations
  12. Kevin Carson **, mutualism, relocalized production
  13. Manuel Castells, networked society
  14. Chris Cook, Open Capital
  15. David de Ugarte **, on Phyles as a new global organisational form, http://p2pfoundation.net/Special:Search?search=%22David+de+Ugarte%22&fulltext=Search
  16. Stephen Downes, peer learning
  17. Charles Eisenstein *, author of The Ascent of Humanity and Sacred Economics
  18. Rick Falkvinge, Pirate Party founder
  19. Silvia Federici: [1], role of women in the commons
  20. Suresh Fernando
  21. Jorge Ferrer **, participatory spirituality
  22. Alex Foti, precarious workers movement, Italy
  23. Mayo Fuster-Morell, European social movements, modalities of open source and platform governance
  24. Alexander Galloway, Protocollary Power in networks
  25. Lisa Gansky *, on the Mesh Economy
  26. Neal Gorenflo **, editor of Shareable magazine, on sharing as a social practice
  27. Thomas Greco **, Open Money and Credit Commons
  28. Michael Gurstein, community networks
  29. Joss Hands *, digitally-empowered political activism
  30. Paul Hartzog **, on complexity, panarchy, and global governance
  31. Silke Helfrich **, commons researcher and advocate
  32. John Heron **, participatory spirituality, cooperative inquiry
  33. Pekka Himanen, the hacker ethic
  34. Brian Holmes
  35. Wolfgang Hoechsele **, economics of abundance
  36. Pat Kane **, author the Play Ethic
  37. Athina Karatzogianni **, cyberconflicts
  38. Dmytri Kleiner **, anti-capitalist peer production through Venture Communism
  39. Lawrence Lessig, IP law, creator of Creative Commons
  40. Simona Levi **, founder and leader of the Free Culture Forum
  41. Bernard Lietaer, monetary reform and transformation
  42. Alessandro Ludovico, Neural.it, p2p art and culture, Italy
  43. Ezio Manzini **, local mutual aid oriented inititiatives by civil society groups
  44. Alan McCluskey, community-based learning
  45. Armin Medosch
  46. Massimo Menichelli, on Open Design
  47. Glyn Moody, active free software advocate and commentator
  48. Phoebe Moore **, global labour trends
  49. Matteo Pasquinelli, conflicts in the knowledge economy
  50. George Pór **, theorizing Collective Intelligence
  51. Mathieu O'Neill **, governance of open source communities
  52. Apichai Puntasen, Thailand, Buddhist Economics
  53. James Quilligan **, theorizing the Global Commons
  54. John Robb *, open source insurgencies and resilient communities, http://p2pfoundation.net/Special:Search?search=%22John+Robb%22&fulltext=Search
  55. Andy Robinson, social movement thinker, UK
  56. David Ronfeldt**
  57. Douglas Rushkoff **, author, development of democratic cyber culture
  58. Sam Rose **, peer production and local communities, open p2p infrastructures
  59. Nikos Salingaros **, on P2P Urbanism
  60. Juliet Schor *, economics of abundance
  61. Trebor Scholz **, distributed creativity
  62. Orsan Senalp**, p2p and labor
  63. Clay Shirky *, the Cognitive Surplus making possible bottom-up Peer Production
  64. George Siemens, connectivist learning
  65. Felix Stalder, theorizing free culture and open movements
  66. Richard Stallman, founder of free software
  67. Don Tapskott, author of Wikinomics
  68. Tiziana Terranova, exploitation of free labour in networks
  69. Tere Vaden **, the Political Economy of Digital Literacy
  70. Jeff Vail *, a theory of distributed power http://p2pfoundation.net/Special:Search?search=%22Jeff+Vail%22&fulltext=Search
  71. Roberto Verzola **, on the economics of abundance and scarcity, http://p2pfoundation.net/Special:Search?search=%22Roberto+Verzola%22&fulltext=Search
  72. Eric von Hippel *, user-led innovation in industrial production
  73. Hilary Wainwright **, democratic and participatory public services, and the link between the commons and labour, http://blog.p2pfoundation.net/?s=%22Hilary+Wainwright%22
  74. Jay Walljasper **, All That We Share, on the emergence of local commons initiatives
  75. Mackenzie Wark *, author of the Hacker's Manifesto, a class analysis of the Hacking Class
  76. Steve Webber, author of the Success of Open Source


See also "visionary developers" of p2p infrastructure:

Commons-Oriented Economists

(This list is updated here: Commons-Oriented Economists)

A list originally compiled by David Bollier:

  1. Peter Barnes, Pt. Reyes Station, California (former entrepreneur; commons; Sky Trust)
  2. Yochai Benkler, Harvard Law School (digital commons; not an economist, but he might as well be)
  3. Sam Bowles, Santa Fe Institute (economics as seen through complexity theory & evolutionary sciences)
  4. James Boyce, UMass Amherst (ecological economics)
  5. Herman Daly, steady-state economics
  6. Gerald Epstein, UMass Amherst (cooperatives)
  7. Josh Farley, U. of Vermont (ecological economics, community development)
  8. Nancy Folbre, UMass Amherst (feminist economics/caring economy)
  9. Katherine Gibson, Australia (community economics; former writing partner with the late Julie Graham, a.k.a., J.-K. Gibson-Graham)
  10. Wolfgang Hoeschele, Truman State University, Missouri (Solidarity Economy, commons)
  11. David Korten, author
  12. Richard Norgaard, UC Berkeley
  13. Elinor Ostrom, Arizona State & Indiana U. (commons; not an economist, but she might as well be)
  14. Wolfgang Sachs, Wuppertal Institute, Germany


See also:

  1. Robert Costanza, U. of Oregon (a leading ecological economist; not sure of commons-orientation)


Organisations:

  1. Association for Georgist Studies (the Henry George crowd)
  2. E.F. Schumacher Foundation: hosts annual lecture series that often includes iconoclastic economist-types
  3. New Economics Institute: Schumacher spinoff with ties to New Economics Foundation in UK, which aspires

to develop alternative economic approaches.