[P2P-F] Very important historical essay on the relation between the market and the commons
Michel Bauwens
michelsub2004 at gmail.com
Fri Sep 27 09:02:35 CEST 2019
Articulating an Empirically Grounded Model of the Relation Between Markets
and Commons
<https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/Articulating_an_Empirically_Grounded_Model_of_the_Relation_Between_Markets_and_Commons#mw-head>
<https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/Articulating_an_Empirically_Grounded_Model_of_the_Relation_Between_Markets_and_Commons#p-search>
** Article: Situating the sharing economy: between markets, commons and
capital. By Adam Arvidsson. Chapter 2 of the Handbook of the Sharing
Economy
<https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/index.php?title=Handbook_of_the_Sharing_Economy&action=edit&redlink=1>,
Pages:10–26. Edited by Russell W. Belk, Giana M. Eckhardt and Fleura
Bardhi. Elgar, September 2019*
URL = https://doi.org/10.4337/9781788110549.00007
Abstract[edit
<https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/index.php?title=Articulating_an_Empirically_Grounded_Model_of_the_Relation_Between_Markets_and_Commons&action=edit§ion=1>
]
"This chapter uses historical sociology to articulate an empirically
grounded model of the relation between markets, commons, sharing and
exchange in the history of capitalism in the West. The author revisits
historical debates on the role of the commons in the transition to
capitalism in the European Middle Ages to suggest that the market and the
commons have a history of long and complicated relations in the development
of Western modernity. His intention is to build on the renewed attention to
the longue durée of capitalism and modernity-greatly inspired by recent
debates on the Anthropocene—to explore what new insights can be gained from
shifting the focus away from the great transformation of the 19th century
that often figures as a model for how social change might come about. The
author concludes that, far from being a historical novelty, the present
emergence of a commons based sharing economy is a recurrent feature that in
the past has implied a potential for systemic transformation."
PROBABLY SIMILAR TO ;
Capitalism and the Commons
<https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/Capitalism_and_the_Commons#mw-head>
<https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/Capitalism_and_the_Commons#p-search>
** Article: Capitalism and the Commons. By Adam Arvidsson.Theory, Culture &
Society, 2019*
URL = https://www.academia.edu/40231280/CAPITALISM_AND_THE_COMMONS?
Contents [hide <https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/Capitalism_and_the_Commons#>
]
- 1 Abstract
<https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/Capitalism_and_the_Commons#Abstract>
- 2 Contents
<https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/Capitalism_and_the_Commons#Contents>
- 3 Excerpts
<https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/Capitalism_and_the_Commons#Excerpts>
- 3.1 Author's Summary
<https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/Capitalism_and_the_Commons#Author.27s_Summary>
- 4 More information
<https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/Capitalism_and_the_Commons#More_information>
Abstract[edit
<https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/index.php?title=Capitalism_and_the_Commons&action=edit§ion=1>
]
"This article investigates the potential role of the commons in the future
transformation of digital capitalism by comparing it to the role of the
commons in the transition to capitalism. In medieval and early modern
Europe the commons supported gradual social and technological innovation as
well as a new civil society organized around the combination of
commons-based petty production and new ideals of freedom and equality.
Today the new commons generated by the global real subsumption of ordinary
life processes are supporting similar forms of commons-based petty
production. After positioning the new petty producers within the framework
of the crisis of digital capitalism, the article concludes by extrapolating
a number of hypothetical scenarios for their role in its future
transformation."
Contents[edit
<https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/index.php?title=Capitalism_and_the_Commons&action=edit§ion=2>
]
"The paper divides in four sections.
- After some background and a preliminary definition of key concepts
(like ‘capitalism’ and ‘commons’),
- I revisit the role of the commons in the development and crisis of
European feudalism.
- The following section seeks to untangle the complicated relation
between modern capitalism and the commons, and identify the specific role
of the commons in contemporary digital capitalism.
- The fourth section suggests that the socialized nature of the digital
commons is driving a revitalization of forms of commons- based petty
production similar to those that contributed to undermining the feudal
order in the 13th and 14th centuries, and draws up a number of hypothetical
scenarios for the possible future transformation of digital capitalism that
might result from this."
Excerpts[edit
<https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/index.php?title=Capitalism_and_the_Commons&action=edit§ion=3>
]
See:
1. Medieval Commons
<https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/Medieval_Commons> ; Medieval
Commonism and the Ideologies of Ethical Markets
<https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/Medieval_Commonism_and_the_Ideologies_of_Ethical_Markets>
2. Markets and Commons
<https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/Markets_and_Commons>
3. Anti-Markets <https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/Anti-Markets> ; Markets
without Capitalism
<https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/Markets_without_Capitalism>
4. Crucial Roles of Petty Producers in the Transition to Capitalism
<https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/Crucial_Roles_of_Petty_Producers_in_the_Transition_to_Capitalism>
Author's Summary[edit
<https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/index.php?title=Capitalism_and_the_Commons&action=edit§ion=4>
]
Adam Arvidsson:
" What is the role of the commons in the future of digital capitalism? What
scenarios do the growing economic and cultural significance of digital
commons like Free an Open Source Software, Commons Based Peer Production
and, lately, blockchain technologies entail? This essay suggest that as
well as a significant source of resistance to capitalism, the digital
commons also support new forms of market oriented ‘petty production’ (to
use Marx’ term). In many ways, this is similar to the role that the commons
- rural and urban - played in the crisis of feudalism in the European Late
Middle Ages. Then as now, the commons were a powerful source of alternative
lifestyles and social movements. They were also crucial to the development
of a new market society that became a source of significant technological,
institutional and cultural innovation, laying the foundation for a new
capitalist mode of production. In the last section of the paper, I
speculate on whether the digital commons can support a similar process of
market-driven social transformation, and on how this might change the
nature of digital capitalism in the decades to come. *I have chosen the
experience of European feudalism in the 12th to 14th centuries as my main
point of comparison*, rather than the ‘original accumulation’ of the long
sixteenth century, and the Polanyian Great Transformation of the industrial
revolution, which have been the most important historical references for
contemporary scholarship on the anti-capitalist commons. This is not to
suggest that we are in a new Middle Age, as Umberto Eco famously did in the
1970s (Eco, 1977), but rather to highlight the possible role of
commons-based market actors in driving social change."
More information[edit
<https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/index.php?title=Capitalism_and_the_Commons&action=edit§ion=5>
]
- Re-ordered bibliography based on Adam Arvidsson's references: Bibliography
on System-to-System Transitions
<https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/Bibliography_on_System-to-System_Transitions>
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