[P2P-F] Training for facilitators of collaboration between local, government & local commons
Michel Bauwens
michel at p2pfoundation.net
Tue Jul 26 17:54:57 CEST 2011
the RSA must be one of the most prestigious institutions in the UK, no?
must be quite difficult to get 'in' there,
there series of animated presentations are really great,
Michel
On Tue, Jul 26, 2011 at 10:00 PM, George Por <
george at community-intelligence.com> wrote:
> Michel,
>
> > I have no time either for now but see
> http://p2pfoundation.net/Civic_Commons
>
> Ah, I should have known that you’ve already processed that... :-)
>
> You quoted, “The RSA is working with citizens, decision-makers and other
> organisations in Peterborough to develop a Peterborough Civic Commons
> between 2010 and 2012.”
>
> Hm... its sounds like we have something to talk about with RSA... You may
> want to know that one of the main directions of our work at the School of
> Commoning is developing a training program, as a result of which public
> service workers and community change champions will be better prepared to
> facilitate the self-organization of various local cooperatives, citizen
> councils, commons trusts, and the emergence of the stakeholders’ rights and
> responsibilities in protection of common resources.
>
> If anybody on this list does similar work or knows of somebody doing it, we
> would love to get in touch and common with them.
>
> george
>
>
>
> On Tue, Jul 26, 2011 at 8:35 PM, George Por <
> george at community-intelligence.com> wrote:
>
> Are you guys familiar with “The Civic Commons: A model for social action”?
>
> http://www.thersa.org/__data/assets/pdf_file/0003/385518/RSA-Civic-Commons-Final.pdf
>
> For a quick glance, it seems it’s worth our attention, but I don’t have
> time just now to dive into it. If anybody has, pls let us know what you
> think.
>
> george
>
>
> On Tue, Jul 26, 2011 at 7:06 AM, Jeffrey Sterling <*MailScanner has
> detected a possible fraud attempt from "teleboiski at gmail.com" claiming to
> be* *MailScanner has detected a possible fraud attempt from "
> teleboiski at gmail.com" claiming to be teleboiski at gmail.com <
> http://[email protected]> *> wrote:
>
> The global economy is broken because it has evolved and mutated to serve
> the needs corporations (govt corps and fortune 1000 corps) not human beings.
> Many of the commonskeeper and caregiver roles that are a critical function
> for civil society are either considered undervalued chores or the
> responsibility of some bureaucracy. It is imperative to take back
> responsibility for our community commons and form cooperative organizations
> that work to reduce the demand for resources and services that are not
> local.
>
> We need to create a new language and toolkit for a network of community
> economies (geographical and virtual) where people can aggregate demand for
> products/services and fulfill those needs without the middleman (aka Fortune
> 1000 corporations). As we evolve our new economy we must find ways to allow
> many kinds of public benefit organizations to flourish and collaborate by
> being compensated for overall demand reduction. As such,
> the future of resilient, eco-sustainable communities is in demand-side
> reduction cooperatives. Our ablility to set the agenda lies in our control
> of the entire demand-side of the economic equation and our ability to
> self-organize using the Internet.
>
> Let's take a closer look at the community infrastructure from the
> supply-side and the demand-side.
>
> On the supply side a community may have a electricity company, a water
> company, a gas company, oil companies (gasoline), and waste stream companies
> (sewer, trash, recycle, compost). Each company is siloed and views their job
> as maintaining and operating a supply chain for an ever growing demand for
> their service. Some pay lip service to demand reduction at times but it is a
> "fox in the hen house" situation.
>
> Now suppose community members created a demand side reduction cooperative,
> that was funded through a performance based contract placed on each of the
> supply side companies, that provided demand side reduction services to it's
> members.
>
> Examples:
>
> - Catching rainwater in cisterns for graywater and freshwater supply that
> eliminated the need for the next groundwater well or dam.
>
> - Superinsulating all homes in a community to reduce the number of new
> powerplants or a new gas pipeline.
>
> - Creating a smart microgrid that will provide peaking power negawatts as
> an independent power producer and provide solar collectors for peak cooling
> as well as battery backup storage and essential power to computers in the
> home.
>
> - Creating a community wide distributed generation system that provides
> essential power to the community in case of disaster plus CHP (combined heat
> power) to the local hospital/greenhouse/community pool.
>
> - Creating an on demand local ridesharing and shopping delivering service
> using community members and their vehicles to reduce the demand for
> cars/roads/gasoline and providing jobs for underemployed people and reducing
> the demand for underfunding government services.
>
> - Creating community reuse services that reduce the demand for recycling
> and waste removal that reduces the need for landfills.
>
> The basic idea is that siloed supply side companies are not in the business
> of reducing demand they are in the business of increasing supply which
> damages the environment and is not sustainable. Creating community-run
> demand side reduction coops (that are voluntary) will make a community
> resilient, sustainable and will create work for community members. Having a
> community-owned cloud will make the integration of demand side reduction
> services into the life of a community possible. Also establishing
> performance based contracts where demand reductions are measured with make
> it possible for demand side reduction services to be cash flow positive
> because demand reduction decreases the need for supply which keep the money
> in the community.
>
>
>
>
> Given a choice people are usually willing to do more with less. Integrating
> our demand-side consumption using demand-side reduction cooperatives and
> other community benefit entities wil create meaningful work within one's own
> community and make our community more resilient and eco-sustainable.
>
>
>
>
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