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All That We Share
Welcome to a new kind of movement—one that reshapes how we think about ownership and cooperation.
Welcome to the commons. The term may be unfamiliar, but the idea has been around for centuries. The commons is a new use of an old word, meaning "what we share"-and it offers fresh hope for a saner, safer, more enjoyable future. The commons refers to a wealth of valuable assets that belong to everyone. These range from clean air to wildlife preserves; from the judicial system to the Internet. Some are bestowed to us by nature; others are the product of cooperative human creativity. Certain elements of the commons are entirely new-think of Wikipedia. Others are centuries old-like colorful words and phrases from all the world's languages. Anyone can use the commons, so long as there is enough left for everyone else. This is why finite commons, such as natural resources, must be sustainably and equitably managed. But many other forms of the commons can be freely tapped. Today's hip-hop and rock stars, for instance, "appropriate" (quote) the work of soul singers, jazz swingers, blues wailers, gospel shouters, hillbilly pickers, and balladeers going back a long time-and we are all richer for it. That's the greatest strength of the commons. It's an inheritance shared by all humans, which increases in value as people draw upon its riches.
At least that's how the commons has worked throughout history, fostering democratic, cultural, technological, medical, economic, and humanitarian advances. But this natural cycle of sharing is now under assault. As the market economy becomes the yardstick for measuring the worth of everything, more people are grabbing portions of the commons as their private property. Many essential elements of society-from ecosystems to scientific knowledge to public services-are slipping through our hands and into the pockets of the rich and powerful.
The Wealth We Lost
One example of what we're losing comes right out of today's headlines about spiraling health care costs. The creation of many widely prescribed drugs, which millions of people depend upon, was funded in large part by government grants. But the exclusive right to sell pharmaceuticals developed with public money was handed over to drug companies with almost nothing asked in return. That means we pay exorbitant prices for medicine developed with our tax dollars, and many poor people are denied access to treatments that might save their lives.
Another even more absurd example concerns a subject that you would think stirs no controversy-yoga. Through centuries of evolution as a spiritual practice, any new yoga poses or techniques were automatically incorporated into the tradition for everyone to use. But beginning in 1978 an Indian named Bikram Choudhury, now based in Beverly Hills, copyrighted certain long-used hatha yoga poses and sequences as his own invention, Bikram Yoga, and he now threatens other yoga studios teaching these techniques with lawsuits.
The good news is that people all around us are beginning to take back the commons.
Neighbors rising up to keep their library open, improve their park, or find new funding for public schools. Greens fighting the draining of wetlands and the dumping of toxic waste in inner-city neighborhoods. Digital activists providing access to the Internet in poor communities and challenging corporate plans to limit access to information. Indigenous people instilling their children with a sense of tradition and hope. Young social entrepreneurs and software engineers seeking new mechanisms for people to share ideas.
Not all of these people think of themselves as commons activists. Some may not even be familiar with the term. Vel Wiley, the longtime director of Milwaukee's public access TV channels, stood up at a commons event and declared, "When I was asked to be a part of this conference, I thought the commons was for people like Greenpeace, an environmental cause. But I understand now that I have been advocating for the commons over the last twenty years. I realize we're not just a small group advocating that the people have a voice in the broadcasting media. We're all a part of something so much bigger, and that helps us to keep going."
It's not necessary that everyone adopt the word commons. What matters is that people understand that what we share together (and how we share it) is as important as what we possess individually.
Parallels to the Origins of Environmentalism
Growing interest in the commons today resembles the origins of the environmental movement in the 1960s. At that time, there was little talk about ecology or the greening of anything. There was, however, a lot of concern about air pollution, pesticides, litter, the loss of wilderness, declining wildlife populations, the death of Lake Erie, toxic substances oozing into rivers, oil spills fouling the oceans, lead paint poisoning inner-city kids, suburbia swallowing up the countryside, mountains of trash piling up in landfills, and unsustainable farming practices ravaging the land. Yet the word environment did not become a household word until the first Earth Day-April 22, 1970. Bringing an assortment of issues together under the banner of environmentalism highlighted the connections between what until then had been seen as separate causes and fueled the unexpected growth of the environmental movement over the next few years.
The commons offers the same promise of uniting people concerned about the common good in many forms into a new kind of movement that reshapes how people think about the nature of ownership and the importance of collaboration in modern society.
A New Way of Thinking and Living
More than just a philosophical and political framework for understanding what's gone wrong, the commons furnishes us a toolkit for fixing problems. Local activists eager to revitalize their community and protect open space are setting up land trusts-a form of community ownership distinct from both private property and government management. Savvy Web users use the cooperative properties of the Internet to challenge corporations who want to undermine this shared resource by fencing it off for private gain. Villagers and city dwellers around the world assert that water is a commons, which cannot be sold, depleted, or controlled by anyone.
These kinds of efforts extend the meaning of the commons beyond something you own to a bigger idea: how we live together. Peter Linebaugh, a preeminent historian of the commons, has coined the word "commoning" to describe the growing efforts he sees to protect and strengthen the things we share. "I want to stress the point that the commons is an activity rather than just a material resource," he says. "That brings in the essential social element of the commons."
David Bollier, one of the leading theorists of the commons on the international stage, has defined the term as a social dynamic. "A commons arises whenever a given community decides it wishes to manage a resource in a collective manner, with special regard for equitable access, use and sustainability. It is a social form that has long lived in the shadows of our market culture, and now is on the rise, " he wrote in the British political journal Renewal.
Julie Ristau and Alexa Bradley, community organizers with extensive experience, find that many people have internalized the competitive ethos of the market mentality so fully that they believe any cooperative action is doomed to fail. They're losing the ability to even think of working together. Yet at the same time, Ristau and Bradley detect in others "a broad yearning for hope, connection, and restoration. We see a remarkable array of efforts to reconstitute community, to relocalize food, to move toward cooperative economics, to better harmonize our lives with the health of our planet. These efforts spring from a deep human need and desire for different ways of interacting and organizing resources that will help us reconstitute our capacity for shared ownership, collaboration, and stewardship."
Growing numbers of people are taking steps that move us, gradually, in the direction of a commons-based society-a world in which the fundamental focus on competition that characterizes life today would be balanced with new attitudes and social structures that foster cooperation. This vision is emerging at precisely the point we need it most. Deeply held myths of the last thirty years about the magic of the market have been shattered by the implosion of the global financial bubble, creating both an opening and an acute need for different ways of living.
To deliver us from current economic and ecological calamities will require more than administering a few tweaks to the operating system that runs our society. A complete retooling is needed-a paradigm shift that revises the core principles that guide our culture top to bottom. At this historical moment, the commons vision of a society where "we" matters as much as "me" shines as a beacon of hope for a better world.


19 Comments so far
Show AllThis article provides interesting extensions of the old concept of the commons. Originally, "commons" were fields on a feudal manor which could be used by all of the serfs to pasture their animals (and fertilze the field). Rotating which fields were for pasture each year allowed refertilization of the entire manor.
Unfortunately, today "common" resources are considered to be free for the taking. The concept of net neutrality has just taken a hit from the FCC, which decided to cave in to the wireless companies. And the TV spectrum was given away a few years ago to other broadcasters.
A German Marxist named Hans Enzensberger once wrote that it does not matter who owns the means of production or who accumulates the profits. What matters is that captialism is a mode of production. It demands production, which means that anything and everything has to be considered as a commoditiy. That kind of thinking eliminates the "right" of all of us to use commone resources.
The small scale efforts described in this article cannot prevail over the capitalist "model."
The only resource that needs to be cultivated is creativity. Remain in and fully identified with creative intelligence and one automatically aligns oneself with the same intelligence that organizes the natural world. The how and when of using resources is then effortlessly revealed.
In my contact with David Erdal, a British evolutionary psychologist and businessman, he says some very similar things about the commons. The commons was all at one time and actually from Erdal and Andrew Whiten's work established to have gone on among modern humans for at least 88,000 to 90,000 years of 100,000 years of that existence if not up to 188,000 to 190,000 years of 200,000 years of existence as this was a time without any hierarchies they establised in their work within evolutioanry psychology. We defintely need to keep the commons.
Thanks for this great article! It's true that a new cooperative movement is growing with the potential to transform the world, and believe it or not, young people are increasingly joining it. I am active with the Cooperative Food Empowerment Directive, which is a is a training program and research institute empowering students to create ethically-sourced, community-run cafes and food co-ops on college campuses. One of our campus partners, the new Berkeley Student Food Collective, opened in November after successfully kicking a planned fast food chain off UC. In 2011, the Cooperative Food Empowerment Directive is launching our national programming! Learn more at www.cofed.org and please support these awesome students who are leading the way toward a more cooperative and sustainable future!!
Bring America Back !!!!
Like to have an 800 number for all the
'we' 'commons' sstuff I am entitled to
as a good world citizen.
Some other guy has more than his commons of
girlfriends, cause I cannot find even one
to share this Xmas with !! We are just me.
Dagnabbit the ol Grinch does it again in 2010.
The climate disaster is a classic example of what is known as " The tragedy of the Commons."
I have been hearing this for 40 years now, ever since any and all serious organizing of the working class was for the most part abandoned - "in the midst of unprecedented catastrophe, there are hopeful little signs that people's beliefs are being transformed, and they are gathering together to try new and innovative ways to think about and approach life. We should visualize a new happy world., and like the little engine that could, keep repeating 'I think I can, I think I can.'"
The more that happens, the worse things get.
I fact, I would say that this type of thinking is the very cause of conditions getting worse and worse. But we are told to ignore the objective reality, and instead to focus on invisible magical things like beliefs and intentions. "But he is a really nice guy - a beautiful soul - who shares our values."
I would like to thank YES Magazine for discussing what working together is all about and why it is important that we have team confidence and spirit. None of this is new. We have all done our best to reach out to one another and do some things together as neighbors even in a nation that favors rugged individualism against collective thinking and actions. There has been some blame to go around such as people watching the television and internet while being less socially interactive. I do not support that kind of blaming. Why is it that every nation has better access to television and the internet and yet people can organize and take to the streets better while this nation sits like a hee-haw and fights for more abuse? I don't know how people organize in other nations but I hear that people are less individualist and yet have a good level of both self-confidence and that people are able to build a good level of team confidence to work things out. The sooner we Americans do something along those lines, the better off we'll all be.
Seems that one of the reasons for the apparent complacency in the US is that our ruling elite is far more corrupt than that of other developed nations, and that the american people are treated more or less like cattle.
Americans work far more hours for less money each year, our air, water, & food is much more polluted by our corrupt industries & our gas guzzling (compared to those of other developed countries) vehicles. Our education system encourages blind obedience, exclusivism & nationalism by brainwashing people into believing many lies, including nonsense that says that ours is the greatest country that has ever existed and that the military industrial complex keeps us free & protects us from bad guys. The obvious result is that ours is a very, very f'd up & dysfunctional family.
It seems that the ruling elite like it that way very much. They are easily able to manipulate the people and gratify their insane desire for ever increasing piles of billions.
If the American people were united & healthy, not overworked, and able to see through the lies of the corporate press, they would surely kick the ruling elite out of power.
Many have high expectations/hopes for wikileaks, much has & can be accomplished by those wonderful people.
===========
This is interesting & relevant:
Wealth: When Will The 98% Tell The 2%, Enough Is Enough?
http://newsjunkiepost.com/2010/12/17/wealth-when-will-the-98-tell-the-2-enough-is-enough/
Wikileaks is one of the best gifts that has any chance of awakening this dysfunctional electorate. Other than that, we'll have to get a lot more things done together and locally.
P.S.: Wikileaks has proven just how much opposed most Americans are towards fighting tyranny in Washington.
common sense.
and the right to ramble.
the "liberal intelligentia" have been repeating the same delay tactic as this article, ever since the advance of capitalism.
majority of the world population have always and unequivocally preferred some form of socialism / communism for their society.
they can't bring themselves to admit socialism / communism is the alternative to capitalism.
they enjoy their comfort and "intellectual and moral superiority" in the capitalist system too much.
simple as that.
As David Erdal, the Briish businessman and evolutiomnary psychologist would say "There is no tragedgy of the commons except the loss of it." The book by the same name was a rip off as he and others wold tell anyone. A person with no expertise in the human use of the commons proceeds to try to build a straw man and tear it down, and comes up wtih a lot of hot air and BS. This same person might well promote the idea that privatizing everything would be just great-- great for whom, we might ask.
Erdal has applied his belief in the commons by pushing for all employee owned companies, starting with the one his own familiy business.
Also pure "Communist soceties" such as the indigenous ones here in this country and the rest of the Western Hemishphere which Karl Marx used as examples had a great respect and perhaps even reverence for the commons.
AD
That gets to the heart of the matter -
The "liberal intelligentia" are forever repeating and promoting the same program of delay and defer.
They cannot tell the truth - or tolerate anyone else telling the truth - because they enjoy their comfort and status - "intellectual and moral superiority" - in the capitalist system too much.
You may be thinking of "petit bourgeois", or neo-liberals, not liberal humanists, anarchists or left libertarians.