Difference between revisions of "Category:Commons Policy"
Line 36: | Line 36: | ||
=Status of city-based commons transitions= | =Status of city-based commons transitions= | ||
− | + | ==A== | |
* [[Amsterdam Is Pivoting to Doughnut Economics as Policy Framework]]; and it has signed the [[Maak Accord 020 - Amsterdam]] with contributory citizens, promising to set aside up to 10% of the city budget for territorial change. Amsterdam is working with De Meent and Commons Network on a commons transition for the city. See f.e. [[Amsterdam 2018 Coalition Accord and its Commons-Centric Elements]]; The crafting of the [[Commons Transition Plan for Amsterdam]] is ongoing; | * [[Amsterdam Is Pivoting to Doughnut Economics as Policy Framework]]; and it has signed the [[Maak Accord 020 - Amsterdam]] with contributory citizens, promising to set aside up to 10% of the city budget for territorial change. Amsterdam is working with De Meent and Commons Network on a commons transition for the city. See f.e. [[Amsterdam 2018 Coalition Accord and its Commons-Centric Elements]]; The crafting of the [[Commons Transition Plan for Amsterdam]] is ongoing; | ||
− | * | + | ==B for Barcelona and Bologna== |
− | [ | + | |
+ | * Barcelona has crafted several policy plans with a distinct attention to the concept of the Commons: see [[Barcelona City Council Open Digitisation Plan]] ; [[Barcelona City Data Commons]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | * Italian cities started implementing protocols for formal collaboration between public authorities after the crafting of the [[Bologna Regulation for the Care and Regeneration of Urban Commons]]; see also: [[Bologna's Urban Commons Approach]] and: [[Christian Iaone on the Urban Commons Charters in Italy]]. See also here for more info on the [[Co-Cities Project]]. | ||
+ | ==G for Ghent and Grenoble== | ||
* The [[Commons Transition Plan for the City of Ghent]] was crafted in 2017 [https://stad.gent/ghent-international/city-policy-and-structure/ghent-commons-city/commons-transition-plan-ghent]. See for the official dutch version: [https://stad.gent/sites/default/files/article/documents/Commons%20Transitie%20Plan%20Gent.pdf]. Unfortunately, a new coalition has not advanced on the issue since the last electoral cycle; prospects are dim. | * The [[Commons Transition Plan for the City of Ghent]] was crafted in 2017 [https://stad.gent/ghent-international/city-policy-and-structure/ghent-commons-city/commons-transition-plan-ghent]. See for the official dutch version: [https://stad.gent/sites/default/files/article/documents/Commons%20Transitie%20Plan%20Gent.pdf]. Unfortunately, a new coalition has not advanced on the issue since the last electoral cycle; prospects are dim. | ||
For context, see our P2P Foundation Report: [[Changing Societies through Urban Commons Transitions]]. By Michel Bauwens and Vasilis Niaros. P2P Foundation and Heinrich Boll Foundation, 2017 [http://commonstransition.org/changing-societies-through-urban-commons-transitions/] This is a more reflexive document on the experience in Ghent, with chapter 3 focusing on Ghent itself. | For context, see our P2P Foundation Report: [[Changing Societies through Urban Commons Transitions]]. By Michel Bauwens and Vasilis Niaros. P2P Foundation and Heinrich Boll Foundation, 2017 [http://commonstransition.org/changing-societies-through-urban-commons-transitions/] This is a more reflexive document on the experience in Ghent, with chapter 3 focusing on Ghent itself. | ||
+ | |||
+ | * the city of Grenoble, in France, where a permanent assembly of the commons, involving citizens and local organizations, was directly promoted by the city council. | ||
+ | [https://generative-commons.eu/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/policy-brief_last-version-post-round-table.pdf] | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | ==L for Lille== | ||
+ | |||
+ | * In several French cities, commoners have organized initiatives like the [[Assembly of the Commons]] and the [[Chamber of the Commons]], for which Lille in Northern France was the pioneer. There is already a political influence of commons' themes, see: [[Commons Proposals for the French Municipal Elections of 2019]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==N for Naples== | ||
+ | |||
+ | Naples was one of the first cities to institute [[City-Based Departments of the Commons]]. See also its [[Assessor of the Commons]] ; | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | ==S for Seoul, Sydney== | ||
+ | |||
+ | * The now deceased mayor Park of the city of Seoul announced to the P2P Foundation an inquiry on how to move from the paradigm of the sharing city, which made Seoul famous, to that of a commons city. The Karl Polany Asia Institute, in collaboration with the P2P Foundation, are preparing a report on the urban commons in Seoul. | ||
* The Commons Lab of Sydney has sent a [[Draft Proposal for a Commons Transition Plan for the City of Sydney]] in August 2019 | * The Commons Lab of Sydney has sent a [[Draft Proposal for a Commons Transition Plan for the City of Sydney]] in August 2019 | ||
− | |||
− | + | ==Miscellaneous== | |
* List of specific Commons Labs: Antwerp, Belgium ; The Hague, Netherlands [https://www.commonslabdenhaag.nl/] | * List of specific Commons Labs: Antwerp, Belgium ; The Hague, Netherlands [https://www.commonslabdenhaag.nl/] | ||
− | * | + | * The [[Co-Cities Report on the Urban Commons Transitions]] of LabGov (with the collaboration of the P2P Foundation), has analyzed 1,000 case studies of urban commons, half from the Global South. |
− | |||
==Regional and Larger Scale== | ==Regional and Larger Scale== |
Revision as of 15:10, 13 September 2020
In this section, we are compiling policy proposals that are specifically oriented around commons.
We endorse the proposal by Joseph Cederwall: A Global New Deal For The Commons [1]
Contents
Introduction
Five Basic Design Principles for the Urban Commons
Christian Iaione and Sheila Foster:
"We have distilled five key design principles for the urban commons:
- Principle 1: Collective governance refers to the presence of a multi-stakeholder governance scheme whereby the community emerges as an actor and partners up with at least three different urban actors
- Principle 2: Enabling State expresses the role of the State in facilitating the creation of urban commons and supporting collective action arrangements for the management and sustainability of the urban commons.
- Principle 3: Social and Economic Pooling refers to the presence of different forms of resource pooling and cooperation between five possible actors in the urban environment
- Principle 4: Experimentalism is the presence of an adaptive and iterative approach to designing the legal processes and institutions that govern urban commons.
- Principle 5: Tech Justice highlights access to technology, the presence of digital infrastructure, and open data protocols as an enabling driver of collaboration and the creation of urban commons."
(https://www.thenatureofcities.com/2017/08/20/ostrom-city-design-principles-urban-commons/)
Key Concepts
- The Global Urban Commons Stack, a proposal for leagues of cities, associated with cooperatives, ethical finances and other actors of generative business practice, to create global open design depositories (which we call Protocol Cooperatives, to mutualize the basic urban provisioning systems.
- Public-Commons Partnership protocols for cooperation between the public sector and commons-based collectives seeking to improve the common good of the city. See also the report on the topic by Commonwealth UK: Public-Common Partnerships: Building New Circuits of Collective Ownership. By Keir Milburn and Bertie Russell. Manchester, UK: Commonwealth, 2019
- Institutional proposals for the Commonification of Public Services (such as Acqua Beni Comuni Napoli)
Status of city-based commons transitions
A
- Amsterdam Is Pivoting to Doughnut Economics as Policy Framework; and it has signed the Maak Accord 020 - Amsterdam with contributory citizens, promising to set aside up to 10% of the city budget for territorial change. Amsterdam is working with De Meent and Commons Network on a commons transition for the city. See f.e. Amsterdam 2018 Coalition Accord and its Commons-Centric Elements; The crafting of the Commons Transition Plan for Amsterdam is ongoing;
B for Barcelona and Bologna
- Barcelona has crafted several policy plans with a distinct attention to the concept of the Commons: see Barcelona City Council Open Digitisation Plan ; Barcelona City Data Commons
- Italian cities started implementing protocols for formal collaboration between public authorities after the crafting of the Bologna Regulation for the Care and Regeneration of Urban Commons; see also: Bologna's Urban Commons Approach and: Christian Iaone on the Urban Commons Charters in Italy. See also here for more info on the Co-Cities Project.
G for Ghent and Grenoble
- The Commons Transition Plan for the City of Ghent was crafted in 2017 [3]. See for the official dutch version: [4]. Unfortunately, a new coalition has not advanced on the issue since the last electoral cycle; prospects are dim.
For context, see our P2P Foundation Report: Changing Societies through Urban Commons Transitions. By Michel Bauwens and Vasilis Niaros. P2P Foundation and Heinrich Boll Foundation, 2017 [5] This is a more reflexive document on the experience in Ghent, with chapter 3 focusing on Ghent itself.
- the city of Grenoble, in France, where a permanent assembly of the commons, involving citizens and local organizations, was directly promoted by the city council.
L for Lille
- In several French cities, commoners have organized initiatives like the Assembly of the Commons and the Chamber of the Commons, for which Lille in Northern France was the pioneer. There is already a political influence of commons' themes, see: Commons Proposals for the French Municipal Elections of 2019
N for Naples
Naples was one of the first cities to institute City-Based Departments of the Commons. See also its Assessor of the Commons ;
S for Seoul, Sydney
- The now deceased mayor Park of the city of Seoul announced to the P2P Foundation an inquiry on how to move from the paradigm of the sharing city, which made Seoul famous, to that of a commons city. The Karl Polany Asia Institute, in collaboration with the P2P Foundation, are preparing a report on the urban commons in Seoul.
- The Commons Lab of Sydney has sent a Draft Proposal for a Commons Transition Plan for the City of Sydney in August 2019
Miscellaneous
- List of specific Commons Labs: Antwerp, Belgium ; The Hague, Netherlands [7]
- The Co-Cities Report on the Urban Commons Transitions of LabGov (with the collaboration of the P2P Foundation), has analyzed 1,000 case studies of urban commons, half from the Global South.
Regional and Larger Scale
- Multi-Stakeholder Institutions for Terrotirial Transition - France
- Proposed Constitutional Amendment To Introduce the Commons in the French Constitution
P2P Foundation Reports
* Report/Book: Changing Societies through Urban Commons Transitions. By Michel Bauwens and Vasilis Niaros. P2P Foundation and Heinrich Boll Foundation, 2017 [8]: This is a reflexive document on the experience in Ghent, with chapter 3 focusing on Ghent itself.
- English translation of the original Commons Transition Plan for the City of Ghent can be downloaded here
- Dutch-language report: Commons Transitie Plan voor de stad Gent. Van Michel Bauwens en Yurek Onzia. Juni 2017. In opdracht van de stad Gent. Pdf version of the original dutch-language policy proposal
Key Quotes
We need to couple private sufficiency and public luxury
"The new approach could start with the idea of private sufficiency and public luxury. There is not enough physical or environmental space for everyone to enjoy private luxury: if everyone in London acquired a tennis court, a swimming pool, a garden and a private art collection, the city would cover England. Private luxury shuts down space, creating deprivation. But magnificent public amenities – wonderful parks and playgrounds, public sports centres and swimming pools, galleries, allotments and public transport networks – create more space for everyone at a fraction of the cost.
Wherever possible, such assets should be owned and managed by neither state nor market, but by communities, in the form of commons. A commons in its true form is a non-capitalist system in which a resource is controlled in perpetuity by a community for the shared and equal benefit of its members."
- George Monbiot [9]
Key Resources
Key Articles
- Urban alternatives, to what degree? Parallelisms between Commons and Municipalism. By Iolanda Bianchi. [forthcoming in “Spatial Justice and the Commons”, Center for Spatial Justice: Istanbul], 2019 [10]. See: Parallelisms between Commons and Municipalism for Urban Alternatives
Key Books
- Plunder of the Commons: A Manifesto for Sharing Public Wealth. By Guy Standing. Penguin / Pelican Books, 2019 [11]
- Our Commons: Political Ideas for a New Europe. Ed. by Sophie Bloemen and Thomas de Groot. Commons Network, 2019 [12]. See: Commons-Based Political Ideas for a New Europe
Key Policy Proposals
- Politics for the Commons - France: "Politiques des Commun: Cahier de propositions en contexte municipal": an overview of commons-oriented policies for the municipal level, as a preparation tool for citizen lobbying for the 2020 municipal elections in France. [13]
- Charter of the Commons
- Permanent Commons Fund
- Inclusive Value Ledger, proposed by NY Assemblyman Ron Kim is the first contribution-based public accounting scheme I have heard of; therefore a paramount and pivotal commons-based policy proposal
Key Legislation and Regulation
- Policy Proposals for City as Commons. Find them also in the book: The City as Commons: A Policy Reader. Ed. by José Maria Ramos. Commons Transition Coalition, Melbourne, Australia (2016). [14]
- Support of the french government for makerspaces as drivers of territorial development: "Nouveaux lieux, nouveaux liens : l’Etat s’engage pour les tiers-lieux": "Appel à manifestation d’intérêt : “Fabriques de Territoire”.
Key Videos
Topics
Energy
- Commons-Based Renewable Energy in the Age of Climate Collapse. By David Hammerstein.
- Energy Commons as the Missing Link Between Energy Transition and Climate Justice
- Collaboration between Local Authorities and Renewable Energy Cooperatives
Food and Agriculture
- Moving to a European Common Food Policy instead of a Common Agricultural Policy
- Food Commons 2.0
- Food Commons in Europe
- Food Policy Councils
- Homegrown Minneapolis Commons-Based Food Policy Blueprint
- Territories of Commons in Europe, see the Policy Paper: “Territories of Commons” in Europe: pivotal for food production, nature stewardship, heritage maintenance and climate mitigation. By Jose Luis Vivero Pol et al. Conference Paper for the European Commons Assembly, in Brussels, November 2016 [15]
Housing
- Commons Law for Housing. By Saki Bailey
- Naples Council Resolution of 2016 on Occupied Buildings as Common Goods
- Naples' Government Resolution no. 446 - 2016 on the Identification of Urban Spaces as Commons
- Shared Spaces as Urban Commons in Amsterdam and Berlin
Welfare and Social Solidarity Schemes
Pages in category "Commons Policy"
The following 200 pages are in this category, out of 426 total.
(previous page) (next page)A
- Access to Land
- Accessory Dwelling Unit
- Achieving Wellbeing Without Growth
- Acqua Beni Comuni Napoli
- Activating the Urban Commons Through Sharing Cities
- Ada Colau, Barcelona's New Mayor, on Spain's Political Revolution
- Adrian Wrigley on Land-Based Money
- Alternative Models of Ownership
- Alternatives to the Land Value Tax
- Amsterdam 2018 Coalition Accord and its Commons-Centric Elements
- Amsterdam Is Pivoting to Doughnut Economics as Policy Framework
- Andrea Fumagalli on the Five Criteria To Distinguish a Progressive Interpretation of the Basic Income
- Andrea Reimer on Open Cities and the Open Motion in Vancouver
- Anti-Displacement Toolkit for Greater Boston
- Assembly of the Commons - Helsinki
- Assessor of the Commons
- Atmospheric Commons
B
- Babayagas House
- Barcelona 5.0 Plan
- Barcelona Activa
- Barcelona City Council Digital Plan
- Barcelona City Council Open Digitisation Plan
- Barcelona City Data Commons
- Barcelona City Policies
- Barcelona Commissioner for Cooperative, Social and Solidarity Economy and Consumption
- Barcelona Conference on Social Commons
- Barcelona Digital City Plan
- Barcelona Digital City Plan 2015-2019
- Barcelona Environmental Ordinance
- Barcelona MADE Project
- Barcelona Manifesto in Favour of Technological Sovereignty and Digital Rights for Cities
- Barcelona's Solar Thermal Ordinance
- Basic Income
- Basic Income, Labor, and the Idea of Post-Capitalism
- Berlin's Remunicipalization of its Energy Utilities
- Better Land-Based Economies
- Bologna as a City of Collaboration
- Bologna Regulation for the Care and Regeneration of Urban Commons
- Bologna's Urban Commons Approach
- Bristol's Food Policy and Urban Agriculture Movement
- British Digital Cooperative
- Building a Co-Cities Index To Measure the Implementation of the EU and UN Urban Agenda
- Building Bottom-Up Finance Solutions for Cooperative Housing in Central and South-Eastern Europe
C
- Cap on Annual Material Use
- Carbon Dividends
- Carbon Quantitative Easing
- Carbon Sequestration-Based Cryptocurrency
- Cargo Bike Vienna Program
- Carshare Parking Quotas
- Catalonia in Common
- Cecile Blanchet on Energy as a Commons and Remunicipalization in Germany
- Changes in Urban Governance Under a Radical Left Government in Barcelona
- Changing Societies through Urban Commons Transitions
- Charter of the Commons
- Charters of Urban Commons
- Christian Iaone on the Urban Commons Charters in Italy
- Circular Cities
- Circular Economy Policies for Cities
- Circular Finance
- Citizens Evolving from Data Providers to Decision-Makers in Barcelona
- Citizens Wealth Fund
- Citizens Wealth Fund for the UK
- City Administrations as Practitioners of the Commons in Europe
- City Policies for the Commons Collaborative Economy in Barcelona
- City-Based Departments of the Commons
- Civic Economy in Japan
- Climate Change, Capitalism and Sustainable Wellbeing
- CLT Brussels
- Co-Cities Open Book
- Co-Cities Project
- Co-Cities Report on the Urban Commons Transitions
- Co-City
- Co-City Protocol
- Co-City Protocols
- Co-Viability Analysis
- CoAbode
- Collaboration between Local Authorities and Renewable Energy Cooperatives
- Collective Action Workshop with Michel Bauwens for the City of Greater Bendigo in Australia
- Common but Differentiated Responsibilities and Respective Capabilities
- Common Ground Trust
- Common Ticketing for Mobility as a Service in Helsinki
- Common Wealth
- Commons Approaches to the Infrastructural Gap
- Commons as New Narrative to Enrich the Food Sovereignty and Right to Food Claims
- Commons as Political Subject
- Commons Collaborative Economy
- Commons Development Officers Network - Wales
- Commons Equality Principle
- Commons Fund for the Precariat
- Commons Law for Housing
- Commons Proposals for the French Municipal Elections of 2019
- Commons Transitie Plan voor de Stad Gent
- Commons Transition Plan for Amsterdam
- Commons Transition Plan for the City of Ghent
- Commons Transition Plan for the City of Sydney
- Commons, Markets and Public Policy
- Commons-Based Citizenship
- Commons-Based Climate Response
- Commons-Based Political Ideas for a New Europe
- Commons-Based Renewable Energy in the Age of Climate Collapse
- Commons-Based Welfare Infrastructures in European Cities
- Commons-Innovations Vouchers
- CommonsPolis
- Communitarian Management Framework - Barcelona
- Community Choice Aggregation
- Community Control of Land and Housing
- Community Data as a Legal Concept
- Community Food Enterprises
- Community Food Enterprises in Australia
- Community Solar Gardens
- Community VAT as Commons Taxation
- Community Wealth Building
- Community Wealth Cities
- Community-Led Housing
- Community-Led Local Development Network - Lisbon
- Community-Owned and Controlled Finance
- Context for En Comu's Commons-Oriented Policy for Barcelona
- Convergence for Post Capitalist Transition
- Cooling the Commons
- Cooperation Jackson
- Cooperative City
- Cooperative Commonwealth and the Partner State
- Cooperative Housing in Egypt
- Creating City Portraits - Doughnut Economics Methodology
- Crowdfunding for European Structural and Investment Funds
D
- Dampbusters Bristol
- Danish Promotion of Renewable Energy Act of 2008
- Data and Digital Intelligence as People’s Resources
- Data Commons License
- Data-Driven Approach to Decision-Making
- DEcentralised Citizen-owned Data Ecosystems
- Declaration of Urban Civic and Collective Use
- Defending Economic Relocalization Against the Arguments for Neoliberal Development Models
- Democratic Ownership Funds
- Department of the Commons - Naples
- Design Principles and Practices for the Urban Commons
- Digital Commons as Drivers of Sovereignty
- Digital Democracy and Data Commons
- Digital Public Assets
- Digital Ultra-Decentralization and the End of Data Centers
- Doughnut Economics
- Doughnut Economics as Policy Framework
- Draft Proposal for a Commons Transition Plan for the City of Sydney
- Dutch Commons Assembly
E
- Economic Benefits of Food Localization
- Edinburgh Cooperative Capital Policy Strategies
- Emergency Ride Support
- Emmanuel Macron and the Commons
- Enabling Urban Commons
- Energiewende
- Energy Consumer Trusts
- Entrust
- Equality-Based Attribution Approach for Carbon Dioxide Emissions
- Equitable Regulation of Rentals
- Eric Piolle
- Ernest Pons
- Ethical and Responsible Data Management of the Barcelona Data Commons
- Ethical Digital Standards Policy ToolKit
- European Association for Public Domain
- European Digital Rights
- European Interoperability Framework
- European Open Data Inventory
- European Policies to Support Open Source Innovation
- European Policy Brief on the Generative Commons
- European Public License
- European Working Group on Libre Software
- Ex-Tax Project
F
- Feed-In-Tariffs
- Financing Climate Change
- Finnish Open Ministry Platform
- Five Basic Design Principles for the Urban Commons
- Flatpack Democracy Civic Politics Revolution in Frome
- Food Commons 2.0
- Food Commons in Europe
- Food Policy Councils
- Food Shed
- Francesca Bria on Barcelona’s Strategy for Technological Sovereignty
- From a Data-Driven to a Data-Enabled Right to the City
- From Common Goods to the Common Good of Humanity
- From Extraction to Stewardship Through a UK Green New Deal
- From Lab to Commons
- Funding an Economy of Civic Spaces in the Cooperative City through Community Finance
- Funding Co-op Community Spaces across Western Canada
G
- Gent en Garde
- German Energiewende as a Resilient Alternative
- German Real Estate Expropriation Movement
- Ghost House Tax
- Global New Deal For The Commons
- Global Resource Agency for Land Rent and Dividends
- Global Urban Commons Stack
- Green Growth vs Commons-Based Ecological Transitions in Australian Cities
- Greenhouse Development Rights
H
- Hamburg's Remunicipalization of its Energy Utilities
- Hamburg’s Current Situation With Regards To Digital Fabrication and Commons-Based Peer Production
- Hartwick Rule of Inter-Generational Equity
- Hilde Latour on Guaranteeing a Basic Income with the Blockchain
- Homegrown Minneapolis Commons-Based Food Policy Blueprint
- How Social Wealth Funds Can Reduce Inequality