Category:P2P Class Theory
Key Articles
From the P2P Foundation
- Class and Capital in Peer Production. Michel Bauwens. Capital & Class 97, Spring 2009 vol. 33 no. 1 121-141 [1]
- Bauwens, M. (2012) “From the theory of peer production to the production of peer production theory”. Journal of Peer Production 1. Available at: http://peerproduction.net/issues/issue-1/invited-comments/from-the-theory-of-peer-production-to-the-production-of-peer-production-theory/ (accessed on 24 July 2013).
- Bauwens, M. and V. Kostakis (2014) “From the Communism of Capital to Capital for the Commons: Towards an Open Co-operativism”. tripleC: Communication, Capitalism and Critique. Open Access Journal for a Global Sustainable Information Society 12(1): 356–361.
Others
- A strategy for the commons in the context of social transformation: Massimo de Angelis, Crises, Movements and Commons. Borderlands e-journal, VOLUME 11 NUMBER 2, 2012. [2]
- The Real World of the Decentralized Autonomous Society. By J.Z. Garrod. Triple C, Vol 14, No 1 (2016) [3]
Bernard Stiegler
For the moment, the only specific p2p philosopher, using the concept of a contributive society, is Bernard Stiegler:
Read this interview on the New Desires of Post-Capitalism:
* Article: ‘THIS SYSTEM DOES NOT PRODUCE PLEASURE ANYMORE’. AN INTERVIEW WITH BERNARD STIEGLER. Pieter Lemmens. Krisis, 2011, Issue 1
URL = http://www.krisis.eu/content/2011-1/krisis-2011-1-05-lemmens.pdf
"Notwithstanding his rather bleak diagnosis of contemporary society, Stiegler is not pessimistic with regard to the future. Whereas today’s capitalism is headed for destruction, it is precisely in the digitalized networks through which it tries to control the populations that a new kind of economy is emerging, one that is not only inventing new modes of production like open source and peer-to-peer, but that is also slowly creating a new economy of desire that could lead to the invention of new ways of life, new modes of individual and collective existence. A new society could arise on the same technological base that is now still predominantly destroying the social bonds. The digital networks might be the prime catalysts in the transformation from today’s consumer society into what he calls a ‘society of contribution’. In this context he talks in this interview about technologies in terms of pharmaka (a term derived from Plato and from his teacher Derrida) that can act both as a poison, destroying sociality and proletarianizing human existence, as well as a medicine, producing social ties and deproletarianzing human existence."
Key Books
Historic
- The Creation of Inequality. How Our Prehistorical Ancestors set the Stage for Monarchy, Slavery, and Empire. by Kent Flannery and Joyce Marcus (Harvard University Press, 2012): "Flannery and Marcus want to the understand the hows and whys of major evolutionary transitions in human history: from egalitarian to achievement-based societies, from those to chiefdoms with hereditary inequality, and subsequently to states and empires."
- Christopher Boehm. Hierarchy in the Forest: The Evolution of Egalitarian Behavior. Harvard University Press. Google Bks version
- The Structure of World History: From Modes of Production to Modes of Exchange. by Kojin Karatani. Duke University Press, 2014 ; for details, see: Evolution of the Structure of World History Through Modes of Exchange
- Global Magic. Technologies of Appropriation from Ancient Rome to Wall Street. By Alf Hornborg. [4] : "This book reveals how our ideas about growth and progress ignore how money and machines throughout history have been used to exploit less affluent parts of world society."
Contemporary
- Cognitive Capitalism, Welfare and Labour. The Commonfare Hypothesis. By Andrea Fumagalli, Alfonso Giuliani, Stefano Lucarelli, Carlo Vercellone. Routledge, 2020 [5]
- Guy Standing. Precariat Charter: From Denizens to Citizens. Bloomsbury, 2014 [6]: discusses how rights - political, civil, social and economic - have been denied to the Precariat, and argues for the importance of redefining our social contract around notions of associational freedom, agency and the commons."
* The Bleeding Edge. Why Technology Turns Toxic in an Unequal World. By Bob Hughes. New Internationalist Books, 2016 [7]
Key Quotes
"The leftist milieus hold onto a notion of the working class that has become historically static, they refuse to see that a main condition of work today is a flexibility of contract, a form of generic working and a collapsing of the division between intellectual and manual labour. A decline in social struggles mirrors the decline of the workplace as the rooted-site where a working class identity, with its ‘shared assumptions’, was enabled to come into being. This decline in workplace struggles and the redefinition of the ‘factory’ may also be indicative of the ‘disaggregation’ of the working class, its being broken into components and work units of a much smaller scale. It could be said that the dichotomy between individual and collective is being played out in just such a zone where working class people are experiencing themselves as ‘working-class individuals’ severed from a wider class belonging. When this is coupled to the ways in which the content of work is changing - ‘the transformation of working class labour into a labour of control, of handling information, into a decision-making capacity’ - we see that what is being demanded from employees is an ‘investment of subjectivity’, the willingness to enter into a ‘vocational’ relationship to work. A crucial component of working class experience today is just this conflict around the production of subjectivity: ‘If production today is directly the production of social relations, then the raw material of immaterial labour is subjectivity and the ideological environment in which this subjectivity lives and reproduces’. (See Maurizio Lazzarato, Immaterial Labour in Radical Though in Italy (University of Minnesota, 1996).)
- Howard Slater [8]
Exploiting information is now key
""Rather than think of the commodity form philosophically, as a kind of eternal essence of capital, I think it is more interesting to think about how the information form comes into contact with the commodity form and forces it to mutate. What emerges is a commodity form far more abstract than anything hitherto, a derivative form, one that does not need any particular material being at all, even though it is in no sense immaterial. Rather, the fact that information can have an arbitrary relation to materiality infects the commodity form itself. Property is no longer a thing. Whole new relations of production have to be concocted to canalize information as a force of production into some new exploitative economy, one now based in the first instance on asymmetries of information. The “business model” of any contemporary corporation is to extract surplus information from both labor and non-labor."
- McKenzie Wark [9]
Non-extractive commons producers are the new political subject
The "potentially progressive political subject-in-itself is rather formed by all those whose labour produces the commons, but does not control, expropriate and dispossess the commons of nature, the social, knowledge, culture, technology, care, and education. The 1% are not part of this political subject, but rather form its dialectical opposite."
- Christian Fuchs (tripleC 14(1): 232-242, 2016)
Fighting for a piece of the pie is not the real struggle
"There can be nothing more fundamental to the understanding of society than the manner in which it organizes its metabolism with nature. How does our society meet our basic needs: clothing, food, shelter, warmth etc. And what is the character of wealth in our society? If wealth is money as more money, then really the satisfaction of human needs is a mere sideshow – in fact, this sideshow is what the class struggle is all about. It is struggle for the means of subsistence, the satisfaction of needs. Class struggle is not the struggle for socialism. It is a struggle for material security. The circumstance that the class tied to work has to struggle to make ends meet posits a devastating judgment about bourgeois society."
- Werner Bonefeld [10]
Emancipation of labor vs emancipation from labor
"At the moment, we find an abundance of research dedicated to building spaces of labor independence within the productive networks most invested in the capitalist mode of value extraction. This rebirth of mutualism and the growth of online cooperation are only the first steps in the struggle. With regard to breaking the sequence of desire-consumption (and its forced monetization), there are widespread efforts to create currencies like Bitcoin and to build autonomous communication networks and/or independent consumption networks, and these efforts are partial but significant. They cannot become decisive, however, without offensively seizing that crucial point where capitalist production transforms productive subjectification into the autocratic production of subjects.
It is clear that the strike against the extraction of value and the strike that operates at the level of the capitalist abstraction of social exploitation are not the same thing. In the first case, the struggle is directed at the appropriation of profit; in the second, at the overturning of models of the reproduction of society, of its capitalist rule, and of the contextual minting of functional currency. Today it is clear that these two levels of struggle are not identical, but they are nonetheless closely connected. The first one is horizontal; the second is vertical. The first is a struggle for the emancipation of labor; the second for liberation from labor. From the point of view of the struggles, it would be impossible to distinguish them. Nor, however, can they be conflated—because the one struggles and the other builds. They must do it separately; they must do it together."
- Antonio Negri [11]
Key Statistics
- Oxfam’s 2017 report: the eight richest men today have the same wealth as the 3.6 billion people who make up the poorest half of humanity [12]
Pages in category "P2P Class Theory"
The following 200 pages are in this category, out of 522 total.
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- Hacker Movement as a Continuation of Labour Struggle
- Hacking Capitalism
- Haroon Sheikh on Who Has Power in a Platform Society
- Hegemonic Transition
- History and Development of the State
- History of Social Mobility
- History of the World in Seven Cheap Things
- Homoploutia
- How Data Is Colonizing Human Life
- How Land Property Is Tied To Inequality
- How Private Power Crushed Liberty
- How Technology Drives Inequality
- How the Capitalist Agrarian Revolution Affected the Commons and Property Regimes
- Human Capital Theory
- Hydrarchy
- Hypermodernity
I
- ICapitalism and the Cybertariat
- Identity Capitalists
- Identity Politics
- Ideology and the Evolution of Vital Institutions
- Immaterial Labor
- Implicit Feudalism of Online Communities
- Inequality
- Intellectual Monopoly Capitalism
- Intellectual Monopoly in Global Value Chains
- International Inequalities Institute
- Interview of Dmytri Kleiner on the Ideas Behind the Telekommunisten Manifesto
- Intra-Elite Competition
- Introduction To Modes of Exchange
- Invention of Capitalism
- Is Free Digital Creative Labor Really Exploitation
- Italian Elite Theory
J
K
L
- Labor and Degrowth
- Labor in Antiquity
- Labor in the Global Digital Economy
- Labor Power and Strategy
- Labor-Value Commodity Chains
- Lama Abu Odeh on How the New Diversity Liberalism Replaces the Progressoriat as the New Academic Ruling Class
- Landlordism
- Left Conservatism
- Left Identitarianism
- Liberty and Property
- Life Subsumption in Cognitive-Biocapitalism
- Lifestyle Leftism
- Limitarianism
- Logged Capitalism
- Long Land War
- Lumpen Bourgeoisie
- Lumpenbourgeoisie
- Luxury Beliefs
M
- Machines, Manufacturing, and Class
- Macroparasitism
- Maga Communism
- Making of a Cybertarian
- Making of an Atlantic Ruling Class
- Making of the Indebted Man
- Malcolm Kyeyune on Identity Politics as a Response to Elite Over-Production
- Managerial Revolution
- Managerial-Therapeutic Regime
- Many-Headed Hydra
- Maroon Communities in Suriname
- Marx and Engels' Analysis of the Spirits as Power and of the Power of the Spirits
- Marxist Critiques of the Contemporary Left
- Matriarchy
- Matt Stoller on the Dangers of Modern Digital Monopolies
- Maurizio Lazzarato on Cognitive Capitalism
- Maurizio Lazzarato on Immaterial Labor
- Maurizio Lazzarato on the Evolution from Labor for Capital to Life for Capital
- Max Horkheimer on the Society of Rackets
- Maximum Wage Policy
- Measuring and Explaining Household Inequality in Antiquity
- Measuring Extreme Poverty
- Media and Power Epochs
- Medieval Hackers
- Meta-Industrial Class
- Meta-Industrial Class and Why We Need It
- Meta-Industrial Workers
- Metaverse Capitalism
- Michel Bauwens on the Conflicts Between Commoners, Capitalists and Intersectionalists
- Minority PMC Unions
- Modes of Exchange
- Money and Slavery
- Multitude
- Multitudes
- Multitudes 15 on Andre Gorz and Cognitive Capitalism
- Multitudes 15 on the Role of the Corporation Under Cognitive Capitalism
- Multitudes 9 on the Concept of the Multitude
- Musa al-Gharbi on Symbolic Capitalists and their Cyclical Awokenings
N
- Nancy Fraser on Progressive Neoliberalism, and Left and Right Populism, as Reactions to the Hegemonic Crisis
- Nation of Shopkeepers
- Natural Asset Company
- Needs-Based Anti-Poverty Production Strategies
- Neo-Guilds for the Crypto and Web3 Economy
- Neo-Reactionaries
- Neoliberalism's Undoing of State and Subject
- Netarchical Capitalism
- Netocracy
- Network for Critical Studies of Global Capitalism
- Network of Global Corporate Control
- Network Orchestrators
- New Desires of Post-Capitalism
- New Petite Bourgeoisie
- New Polity on the Gender Transition from Feudalism to Capitalism
- New Prophets of Capital
- New Reading of Marx
- New Spirit of Capitalism
- New Technocracy
- New Working Class
- Nick Srnicek’s Model of Platform Capitalism
- Nikolas Berdyaev on the Five Historical Periods of Humanity, as Related to Nature and Technology
- Nomadism
- Non-Movements
- Notes on Design Justice and Digital Technologies
O
- Obey
- Occupy as a Movement of the Salaried Bourgeoisie
- Occupy Wall Street and the Decline of the Professional Managerial Class
- Oligarchic Corruption Cycles
- Oligarchies of the World Unite
- Oligarchy
- On the Difference Between Small Capitalism and Big Capitalism
- On the Multiple Frontiers of Extraction Under Contemporary Capitalism
- Open Marxism
- Open Source Exploitation
- Open-Source Extractivism
- Organizing for Power in the New Gilded Age
- Origin of Capitalism
P
- P.R. Sarkar's Theory of Cycles
- Pareto's Theory on Cycles of Elite Succession
- Patriarchy
- Patrimonialism
- Paul Krugman on Piketty and the Patrimonial Capitalism Thesis
- Peak Inequality and the Impoverishment of Society
- Peasant-Citizen and Slave
- Peer Production - Immanence vs. Transcendence
- Persistence of Inequality in China Despite the Revolution
- Peter Turchin on the Overproduction of Elites
- Platform Capitalism
- Platform Socialism
- Platform-Sponsored Grassroots Lobbying
- Platformization of Regulation
- Platforms as States
- Political Economy of the Smallest Things
- Polluter Elite
- Post-1965 Trajectory of Race, Class, and Urban Politics in the United States Reconsidered
- Post-Capitalism
- Post-Exploitation
- Post-National Professional Elite Formation
- Post-Post-Fordism in the Era of Platforms
- Postmodernism as Middle Class Radicalism
- Potentials and Challenges of Digitization in Low-Wage Labor Markets
- Poverty
- Power and Control in Platform Monopoly Capitalism
- Power and Modes of Exchange
- Power Law
- Pre-Industrial Societies
- Precariat
- Precariat Charter
- Precariat Research in Greece
- Precarity, Subjectivity and Resistance in the Creative Industries
- Predistribution of Wealth
- Prehistoric Myths in Modern Political Philosophy
- Present Technological Revolution and the Emergence of Postcapitalist Social Relations
- Primitive Accumulation in Marxism
- Primitive Accumulation of Capital
- Pristine Culture of Capitalism
- Professional-Managerial Class
- Proficians
- Proletarianization
- Proletarianization of Knowledge
- Proletkult
- Property as Power
- Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism
- PSYOP Capitalism
- Public Avowals and the Class Morality of the New Elect
R
- Race and Class in the Age of Trump
- Race and the Enlightenment
- Race Reductionism
- Race-Based Democracy vs Social Democracy
- Racial Wealth Gap
- Re-Inventing Work Through Collective Enterprises for Autonomous Workers
- Reading Hardt and Negri
- Real Subsumption of Life by Capitalism
- Real World of the Decentralized Autonomous Society
- Realist vs Idealist Interpretations of CRT
- Reconfiguration of Work After the Corona Pandemic
- Reconsidering Value and Labour in the Digital Age
- Recuperation of the Hacker Class by Capitalism