[P2P-F] [commoning] New article from Michel Bauwens
Michel Bauwens
michel at p2pfoundation.net
Mon Jun 13 20:37:16 CEST 2016
Thanks, my apologies that you have to read the trollish accusation that "You
lost totally your clear and critical reflective thinking" ... I hope it is
not coming from either p2p-f or networked-labour and that the other
moderators will take the necessary action to make sure this does not become
regular and accepted practice on their lists.
Orsan, glad to hear your thoughts and actions are converging on this.
Unfortunately, I am not very cognizant of Bogdanov (I have mckenzie wark's
book to read still) and certainly not of Galiev .. my analysis is grounded
on both the contemporary practices and questions of existing p2p
'neo-guilds' , like Enspiral which I mentioned, but also on the historical
analogy of the Middle Ages, the so-called 'Silent Revolution" period which
in 12th cy, brought all these new institutions to the fore, i.e. guilds and
land commons
what Tine de Moor may not have known, is that the actual social revolution
already took place earlier, see the First European Revolution of Richard
Moore, setting the conditions for the guilds in the free cities and the
free peasants to form land commons agreements ; also today, with the
ecological emergencies, we may not have time for a long silent revolution
...
here is some literature that you may find of interest,
http://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/Emergence_of_Commons_and_Guilds_as_Silent_Revolution
http://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/Self-Regulation_in_the_Medieval_Guilds_and_Peasant_Commons
http://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/From_Medieval_Guilds_to_Open_Source_Software
http://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/From_the_Communal_Reformation_to_the_Revolution_of_the_Common_Man
http://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/Corporate_Collective_Action
also of interest is that David Bollier has written a similar call for
trans-national action, see
http://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/Transnational_Republics_of_Commoning
On Mon, Jun 13, 2016 at 11:01 PM, Orsan <orsan1234 at gmail.com> wrote:
> Michel, I really liked the concept of United Transnational Republics and
> your vision. To my ears, it comes very nice. It matches with my imagination
> of building a Neo-Galiyevist and Bodpgdanite 'dictatorship' of networked
> transnational of the oppressed peoples of the global south over oppressive
> classes of the global north.
>
> Galiev's original concept, of international of the oppressed peoples (of
> colonies) was based on the idea of dictatorship (or hegemony) of the
> oppressed peoples on the metropolises of the western capitalism, and he put
> Leninist and Trotskyist world revolution model upside down on its heads, he
> also saw federative and state centric vision. Another and more appropriate
> inspiration for developing such conception would be thinking of zapatizm at
> global level as in the argument of John Halloway.
>
> Funny but last night I got a vision, woke up and wrote down; a name popped
> was URRAS (United republics of regenerative advanced societies), as in the
> novel of Leguin (the disspossed); a real utopia which could be build in
> parallel or on top of the existing territorial, rural, metropolitan, spaces
> occupied by state-capital-partnerships by the small scale participation
> mediated by cyberspace, an operating system (like GNU) bu designed
> specifically for building a transnational and trans-local world society. In
> URRAS, the time, gender, means of exchange, production and reproduction,
> culture, communication, all designed, build, and rebuild by and according
> to the needs of the people who care themselves, each other, and the cosmos
> (nature on and beyond earth)..
>
> I strongly agree, like you, that this sounds like science fiction novel,
> but 'the future ' is now and today, and if this real utopia is not
> seriously built bottom up, no one would find the alternative dystopia less
> science-fictional than this one.
>
> Orsan
>
> Why the P2P and Commons Movement Must Act Trans-Locally and
> Trans-Nationally
>
> <http://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/Why_the_P2P_and_Commons_Movement_Must_Act_Trans-Locally_and_Trans-Nationally#mw-head>
> <http://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/Why_the_P2P_and_Commons_Movement_Must_Act_Trans-Locally_and_Trans-Nationally#p-search>
>
>
> Text
>
> Michel Bauwens (Madison, Wisconsin), June 12, 2016:
>
> “One of the best books I have read in the last ten years is undoubtedly,
> The Structure of World History, by Kojin Karatini. Karatini focuses on
> world history as an evolution of ‘modes of exchange’, i.e. how humans
> produce, but most of all , ‘exchange’ value. Like Alan Page Fiske, in
> ‘Structures of Social Life’, Karatini recognizes four basic ways of doing
> this, and this modes exists at all times and in all places. For example,
> while the dominance of capitalism is new, markets have existed since very
> early times ; or, if the dominance of the state was new after the
> replacement of tribal systems, distribution depending on rank, pre-existed
> its dominance. This insight is very important because it allows us to
> recognize that any political and economic system is not just one modality,
> but an integration of modalities. As Dmytri Kleiner says, “we live in a
> multi-modal world’, and ‘if the capitalists won, its because there were
> capitalists already’.
>
> It is quite different to see capitalism as a mere mode of production, and
> then to declare the state and the nation as mere epiphenomena of capital,
> as marxists used to do, or to insist as Karatini does, that capitalism is
> really a triarchy combining Capital-State-Nation.
>
> The reason the present system is so strong, is that the three act in
> concert, and whenever one is endangered, the two other systems mobilize to
> its rescue.
>
> What I want to do now is to interpret Karatini’s insight, by adding
> another layer of analysis, that of Karl Polanyi, expressed in his landmark
> book, The Great Transformation. Polanyi’s book is a history of the
> emergence and perpetuation of capitalism from the late 18th century to the
> 1940’s, in which he sees a double movement at play. In some periods, the
> market forces are dominant, but by being dominant, they actively subvert
> the order of society and dislocate it, putting many people in danger; thus,
> society reacts through mobilisations and forces the market back into a more
> ‘social order’. Think of how the labor movement forced a re-alignment of
> society around the welfare state, and how the counter-revolution of the 80s
> deregulated these social protections in favour of the 1%. Now let’s recount
> this dynamic in Karatini’s scheme.
>
> When capital becomes too dominant in the Capital-State-Nation system, the
> nation, the locus of community and reciprocity dynamics, revolts and
> mobilizes, and forces the state to discipline Capital.
>
> Many observers were puzzled that despite the systemic crisis of 2008,
> there seems to be a lack of such an expected counter-movement, but that was
> just social inertia at play. Now, in 2016, we are in the midst of a
> Polanyian backlash nearly everywhere. Both Trump and Sanders in the current
> US electoral cycle, represent the Polanyian double movement, and are
> reacting against the effects of neoliberalism and its destruction of the
> U.S. middle class. Trump represents the ‘national’ business interests,
> trying to mobilize the declining white middle class and workers, while
> Sanders represent the new generations of workers who are suffering from
> precarity. The signs of this Polanyian counter-movement are visible nearly
> everywhere.
>
> Nevertheless, there is a bug in the (Polanyian) double movement !
>
> And the bug is that ‘Capital’ has developed a trans-national logic and
> capacity. Globalized and financial neoliberalism has fundamentally weakened
> the capacity of the nation-state to discipline its activities.
>
> So, faced with a all-powerful transnational capitalism, the various
> nation-state systems have proven pretty powerless to effect any change.
> This is one of the explanations of the deep distrust that people are
> feeling towards the current political system, which simply fails to deliver
> towards any majoritarian social demand. Look at how the moderately radical
> Syriza movement in Greece was put under a European protectorate and had to
> abandon Greek sovereignty, or look at how the more antagonistically
> oriented Venezuelan government is crumbling. Along with other progressive
> governments in Latin America. So, while the electorate may vote for parties
> that promise to change the status quo, and bring to power eventually
> movements like Podemos, a Labour Party under the leadership of Corbyn, or a
> Democratic Party strongly influenced by the Sanders movement, their
> capacities for change will be severely restricted. Our own recommendations
> in the P2P Foundation, following our work on Commons Transitions, is that
> progressive coalitions at the city and nation-state level should first of
> all develop policies that increase the capacity for autonomy of citizens
> and the new economic forces aligned around the commons. Simply initiating
> left-Keynesian state policies will not be sufficient and will in all
> likelihood be met with stiff trans-national opposition. These pro-commons
> policies should be focused not just on local autonomy, but on the creation
> of trans-national and trans-local capacities, interlinking the efforts of
> their citizens and ethical and generative entrepreneurs to the global civic
> and ethical entrepreneurial networks that are currently in development. To
> be realistic, except in very rare locales, such as perhaps in Barcelona
> under the En Comu coalition or in Bologna, the current progressive
> movements are still very much wedded to the old industrial models.
>
> This means that the current p2p and commons forces must also focus on the
> creation of trans-local and trans-national capacities.
>
> What can we do ? Currently, there is an exponential increase in the number
> of civic and cooperative initiatives, outside of the state and corporate
> world, as documented for example by Tine De Moor in Homo Cooperans for the
> Netherlands. Most of these initiatives are locally oriented, and that is
> absolutely necessary and legitimate. It is vital that citizens transition
> here and now to new models of food and energy provisioning and any other
> domain that needs to be changed from an extractive model that is destroying
> the environment and undermining society, to generative models that create
> added value to the shared resource base that citizens are co-constructing
> everywhere. Ezio Manzini has already taught us that in the networked age,
> there is no such thing as pure locality, and that these are all SLOC
> initiatives, i.e. they are Small and Local, but also Open and Connected. We
> also know that there are today movements that operate beyond the local and
> use global networks to organize themselves. A good example may be the
> Transition Town movement, and how it uses networks to empower local groups.
>
> But this is not enough, at least in our opinion. What we are thinking and
> proposing is the active creation of trans-local and trans-national
> structures, that actively aim to have global effects and change the power
> balance on the planet.
>
> The only way to achieve systemic change at the planetary level is to build
> counter-power, i.e. alternative global governance. The transnational
> capitalist class must feel that its power is curtailed, not just by
> nation-states which may organize themselves inter-nation-ally, but by
> transnational forces representing the global commoners and their livelihood
> organizations.
>
> How can we do this ?
>
> Las Indias, a trans-national hispanic community, has introduced, inspired
> by cyberpunk literature and specifically from the book The Diamond Age from
> Neal Stephenson, the notion of ‘phyles’.
>
> Phyles are trans-national business eco-systems that sustain a community
> and its commons, and they are already successful for certain ethnic and
> religious communities that operate on the global level, such as the soufi
> ‘mourabite’ communities from Senegal, and the indigenous communities of
> Otovallo in Ecuador, where the trans-migrant income-generating systems are
> said to represent one third of GDP. These globally operating networks are
> described in the book, the book by Alain Tarrius, entitled, “Etrangers de
> passage. Poor to poor, peer to peer” (Editions de l’Aube, 2015).
>
> So my argument is that we need to construct phyles for peer production
> communities. Remember the structure of commons-based peer production most
> commonly consists of three institutions. One, the contributory community
> co-creating the shared resources (the open source communities), two, the
> entrepreneurial coalitions creating livelihoods around those shared
> resources. At the P2P Foundation, we favour ‘generative’, ‘ethical
> entrepreneurial coalitions’, which strengthen commons and their
> contributory communities and create an economy for them. These generative
> trans-local and trans-nationally operating coalitions already exist.
> Amongst the best known are Enspiral, originally based in New Zealand ;
> Sensorica, originally based in Montreal, Canada ; Las Indias, mostly based
> in Spain but with many hispanic members from Latin America; the Ethos
> Foundation in the UK. We believe this new type of trans-local organizations
> are the seed form of future global coalitions of generative entrepreneurs,
> sustaining global open design communities. Our working for this trend is
> the eventual creation of a United Phyles Organization, which is represented
> at the local level by the territorial Chambers of Commons.
>
> We also believe that global civic organizations from the commons sphere
> should do the same. Our working name for these are the United Transnational
> Republics.
>
> We are fully aware that these are at present science-fictional notions,
> but if we don’t build them, it will be the extractive multi-national
> organizations of capital that will rule our world, destroy our planet, and
> reduce the world population to generalized precarity.
>
> This construction is by no means impossible, and we can see already the
> construction of many globally nomadic structures as well as global civic
> mobilizations such as those against climate change. But we can’t just
> protest and ask the ‘state’ and ‘states’ to do our bidding; we cannot just
> rely on the weak inter-national structures such as those of the United
> Nations. We must build ‘counter-hegemonic’ power at the global level. This
> means building global open design communities, and the global phyles that
> go with it. At the production level, this means replacing neoliberal
> globalization, which is destroying the biosphere, with cosmo-local
> production coalitions. These follow the rule, ‘what is heavy is local, what
> is light is global’. They combine global open design communities, global
> open cooperatives and phyles, i.e. organizing coordination systems at the
> trans-local and trans-national scale, with relocalized distributed
> manufacturing.
>
> At the political level, this means building territorial assemblies for
> citizens, the Assemblies of the Commons, and assemblies for generative
> entrepreneurial entities, the Chambers of the Commons, and to scale them at
> the national, regional and global levels. This continuous meshworking at
> all levels, is what will create the basis to create systemic change, i.e.
> power to change, at the level where the destructive force of global capital
> and its predation of the planet and its people can be countered.
>
> Let me stress that this does not mean a destructive all-out conflict.
> Dmytri Kleiner has proposed a strategy of trans-vestment, i.e. the transfer
> of value from one modality to another. Enspiral has created a vehicle,
> based on ‘capped returns’, which is able to accept external investments,
> which are then ‘subsumed’ to the values of the generative coalition. At the
> P2P Foundation, we have proposed reciprocity-based licenses, which allows
> the commercialization of open source knowledge on the basis of reciprocity,
> creating a protective membrane around the ethical phyles. The Assembly of
> the Commons in Lille is discussing a trans-vestment vehicle for the state,
> called a General Public License, which allows the assembly to work with the
> world of politics and government, while maintaining the autonomy of the
> commoners.
>
> This has been done before. “If capitalists became dominant, it is because
> there were capitalists’. The reason our current market society came about ,
> is that Europe being at the margins of Empire, never was able to
> consolidate centralized power, allowing independent cities where the
> merchants could exist and expand their power, and this social force became
> dominant after the fall of the absolute monarchs.
>
> Commoners exist, there’s three billion of us in digital commons, and
> likely just as much relying on physical commons, and they have to follow
> the same multi-modal strategy, i.e. prefiguratively build their power and
> influence at all levels, trans-vesting state and market forces to
> strengthen the commons. For this of course, just as laborers did, we have
> to develop a consciousness that we are commoners. Anyone participating and
> co-constructing shared resources without exploiting them, is in fact a
> commoner. And as the current global system becomes increasingly
> dysfunctional, more and more of us have to rely on the commons, and not on
> the market and the state, for our very survival.
>
> If the world of the merchants became the world of Capital-State-Nation, an
> integration of various modalities under the dominance of the market forces,
> then the world of the commoners will be a new integration: Commons –
> Ethical Economy – Partner State. Because we live in a multi-modal world, it
> does not make sense, and is impossible, to create a ‘totalitarian’ commons
> world, but we can aim for a commons-centric world, in which market forces
> and state functions (rule and protect, plunder and distribute) are
> ‘disciplined’ at the service of the commons and the commoners. Like capital
> did before us, we must build our strength, within a multi-modal world.
> Paradoxically, I believe it is because the ‘extractive’ model is
> incompatible with our survival, that the time for a ‘generative’ transition
> will come and is in fact not just indispensable, but likely.
>
> The commons is civil society, where citizens contribute to the commons and
> choose where they invest their care for the common good of their
> communities, the planet and humanity; the ethical economy consists of the
> livelihood organizations of the commoners, where generative market
> practices add value for the commoners and the commons ; and the ‘state’ of
> the commons, presently prefigured by the for-benefit associations which
> manage the infrastructures of cooperation of the open source communities,
> is the ‘partner state’ which enables and empowers the capacities of
> individuals and communities to participate and contribute to the commons of
> their choice.
>
> This fundamental transformation of our social, political and economic
> systems, requires more than a local approach, it requires trans-local
> practices and forms of organization. Let’s get to work.”
>
> _______________________________________________
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> Commons-Institut e.V. Germany
> Commoning at lists.commons-institut.org
> https://lists.schokokeks.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/commoning
>
>
--
Check out the Commons Transition Plan here at: http://commonstransition.org
P2P Foundation: http://p2pfoundation.net - http://blog.p2pfoundation.net
<http://lists.ourproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/p2p-foundation>Updates:
http://twitter.com/mbauwens; http://www.facebook.com/mbauwens
#82 on the (En)Rich list: http://enrichlist.org/the-complete-list/
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