DisCO Principle 3: Active Creators of Commons
DisCOs are giving back to the commons: Commons are self-managed, community-led processes to govern resources and relationships. While capitalism encloses the commons by turning nature into products and relationships into services, DisCO creates capacity by growing new commons in digital and physical space
Overview
To talk about the Commons first we have to agree on what the commons means.
Commons can be understood from different perspectives, but several principles are mainstays. Author David Bollier describes Commons as a shared resource, co-governed by its user community according to the community's rules and norms. Commons include gifts of nature such as water or land, and shared assets or creative work such as culture and knowledge. Commons can also include goods and resources which are either inherited or human-made.
Things that can be treated as “a commons” include natural resources (water, air), and created assets (culture, knowledge), and can be either inherited or human-made, but “The Commons” refers to process as a whole, the synergy between the elements of a community, a resource and its co-governance.
Whether goods and resources within a Commons can be shared or not is described as "rivalrous" goods, which two people cannot both have at the same time, and "non-rivalrous" which are not depleted by use.
The following four perspectives, according to commons scholar and activist Silke Helfrich, offer ways to both perceive and interact with Commons:
- Collectively managed resources, both material and immaterial, which need protection and require a lot of knowledge and know-how.
- Social processes that foster and deepen thriving relationships. These form part of complex socio-ecological systems which must be consistently stewarded, reproduced, protected and expanded through commoning.
- A new mode of production focused on new productive logics and processes.
- A paradigm shift, that sees commons and the act of commoning as a worldview.
It is said, “There is no commons without commoning”. The Commons is neither the resource, the community that gathers around it, nor the protocols for its stewardship, but the dynamic interaction between all these elements.
An example is Wikipedia: there is a resource (universal knowledge), a community (the authors and editors) and a set of community-harvested rules and protocols (Wikipedia’s content and editing guidelines). The Wikimedia Commons emerges from all three. Another example, but in a radically different context, is the Siuslaw National Forest, in Oregon, USA. Managed as a commons, we also find a resource (the forest), a community (the loggers, ecological scientists and forest rangers comprising its ‘watershed council’) and a set of rules and bylaws (the charter for sustainably co-managing the forest).
No master inventory of commons exists, as they arise when a community decides to manage a resource collectively. The Commons as a whole thrives on the vast diversity of individual commons worldwide, ranging from fisheries to urban spaces, and many other forms of shared wealth.
Typical market enterprises permit the exploitation of shared wealth, such as land, natural resources or human knowledge. According to mainstream economics, businesses are drivers of a process of enclosure, whereby resources are turned into commodities and relationships into services. DisCOs reverse this trend by actively generating decommodified, open-access resources. These new commons can created through market and value-tracked pro bono work. Commons may be digital (code, design, documentation, legal protocols and best practices, etc.) or physical (productive infrastructure, deliberation spaces, machinery, etc.)
The key here is to share access to these commons and govern them collectively. "Commons" is the term we use due to the extensive recent literature on the subject, but this way of stewarding the gifts of nature, or the cultural traditions we share have been the de facto mode of human organization for most of our existence. Many cultures operating outside the limitations of capitalism are deeply familiar with these practices. The sustenance of an estimated 2.5 billion people worldwide depend on some form of natural resource commons, mainly in the global south, yet many of these remain unprotected and vulnerable to enclosure. It has been postulated that a similar number are co-creating shared resources online through digital platforms. These potentially massive affinity networks presently lack a common identifier or unifying vision to articulate a different path for change. But we see the ideas of commoning as a shared thread.
If capitalism is the driver of enclosure, how can we protect the new commons we create from capitalism0's predatory nature? For this we suggest using commons-compatible legal means and structures. Cooperatives and Community Land Trusts are two good examples of using legal means to protect our values, whether they concern people or land. We also suggest using commons-specific licensing, such as the Peer Production License or our upcoming DisCO-specific licenses.
Principle 3 teaches you to see the commons and then care about them. This care approach is key in order to restore existing or create new commons. By fostering commons instead of market resources, we bring down the cost of social collaboration. This is of huge importance, given the huge ecological and social challenges we face as a species. The more we can share spaces, mutual support, relevant knowledge and best practices the easier it will be to turn the tide around and create a world where many worlds are possible.
Examples
Laneras give free workshops on the recuperation of merino wool harvesting traditions in Western Spain. They are also open sourcing low-tech machinery for weaving and looming. Laneras works to revive sustainable practices, spinning traditions and the use of local raw materials to prevent their loss, and to revitalize the community and territory, protect local land and social bonds and support biological biodiversity and rural development.
Guerrilla Media Collective creates open knowledge repositories of the work they produce, e.g., pro-bono translations and illustrations, shared on the web under a Peer Production License, which benefits coops while discouraging extraction. The collective itself documents its practices in its wiki to share with other DisCOs.
Why this is important
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Tensions
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Interactions with other principles
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Related Elements
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More Resources
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