Pattern #13
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Commons and Commoning
Credits: Rich Koele – Tero Hakala – connel – PearlNecklace – Shutterstock
Pattern Heart
The commons includes anything which supports quality of life and is available to all — nature, culture, knowledge, infrastructure, etc. — that we are responsible for stewarding and passing on in good condition, a responsibility called commoning. So treasure, reclaim, steward, share, and mindfully evolve the commons as an open source of abundance, life and wisdom, and as sacred common ground.
Some related patterns: 24 Deep Time Perspective 28 Equity
41 Groundedness 46 Inclusive Stakeholder Governance 57 Nature First 72 Regenerativity 75 Sacredness
Commons and Commoning – going deeper …
This is an edited version of the video on this page.
If you want a wise democracy, you need to have very rich commons to encourage people being together and taking responsibility together – for the long-term, as is pointed out by the associated pattern called “Deep Time Perspective”. Everybody is taking care of the commons, this thing which we all use. It is ours. It is something that includes everybody: “We use the streets.” “We use the sidewalks.” They are part of our commons. We need to take care of them.
Nature is too often assumed to either be there as a commons and not well taken care of, or it is owned and not totally available to everyone else. Whenever you see privatization activities, that means that pieces of the commons are being contained and changed into commodities. The commons is not a commodity. Take a look at the fact that as our water gets polluted, more people are drinking bottled water. This is an example of not taking care of the commons, not stewarding the commons in a way that maintains it as a commons. It becomes something which is part of the landscape but is not usable by people. Even air and water are becoming colonized.
Lots of people think the commons is nature and we should take care of it, but a lot of the built environment is also commons, like sidewalks. I wrote a poem about that, “As Democratic as a Sidewalk”. But note that anybody can walk on the sidewalk, but you can’t sleep or sit on the sidewalk. In some places there’s lots of efforts to close down the commons.
There are also cultural commons, the often nonphysical aspects of life that we all live with. People share language and care about it, and there are people who try to preserve languages, there’s people who try to defend their right to use them. Diverse languages around the world embody different ways of looking at things. In some languages you can say things you can’t say in other languages. I know people who are working to preserve languages, even as the cultures that they belong to are going extinct. They are desperately trying to preserve the language because it has its own value. It would be nice if the culture could be preserved also, but in the onslaught of globalization and economies, cultures that go along with that – or succumb to it – often lose valuable parts of themselves, and sometimes you need to take a piece of such a culture and preserve it.
Video Introduction (12 min)
Examples and Resources
- Public libraries – Link – (including new libraries for tools etc, see Public Commons below)
- Wikipedia re Commons – Link – and the variety of Public Commons – Link
- P2P Wiki re Commoning – Link
- The Commons Short and Sweet (Bollier) – Link
- School of Commoning Link
- P2P Foundation Link
- National Parks Link
- Stewardship Link
- Our Children’s Trust Suit (public trust doctrine) Link
- CSAs
Link-Wikipedia - Community Land Trusts
Link-Wikipedia - The cooperative movement
Link-Wikipedia - Creative commons license Link
- Indigenous “oursness”
Link-Education for Sustainibility - Public schools
and its challenges Link-Scu.edu - Patterns of Communing – Link
Public libraries are such a great example of a commons. There’s now tool lending libraries being created. People are creating other kinds of libraries that may or may not be associated with book libraries. Libraries embody the idea that we can have a shared body of stock that anybody can borrow from if they play by the rules.
Then there’s the School of Commoning that exists that trains people in thinking and acting this way and the P2P (Peer to Peer) Foundation. The sense of having spaces where we as individual peers come together and work on common projects. There is a P2P website that looks at all those kinds of phenomenon going on in societies, which is a great source of information about the commons.
There is a wiki for posting things about the commons.
National parks are another great example, and they need stewardship, as I mentioned.
What fantastic new concepts to me here – stewarding the commons as “commoning, a cultural commons, and commons based peer production. I marvel at having my vocabulary and grasp of concepts expand!
When I am reflecting on my own life, I have met commoning in so many forms. Access to the school system was regarded as a “common”. Nobody owned it, it was available for all citizens. Libraries with access to books and magazines were also “public” for me. I guess that had an impact on my choice of work after my engineering education (a Master of Science in Electtronics). First in a Public Library. Then in a Research Library, and finally in the Swedish National Library. My work on the national level brought med into standardisation (MARC-format, ISBN, ISSN, Dublin Core). With my purchase of my first Apple II-computer I also discovered “digital commons” like LibreOffice, and the “semi-commons” with free access to web sites. “semi.commons”, because there are always limitations compared to “premium”-subscriptions (e.g. ads in between music on Spotify). Now I contribute also to Wikipedia as one of the flag ships of the “digital commons”. Through the P2P foundation I have also found the works by Yochai Benkler on commons-based peer production. His book “The wealth of networks : how social production transforms markets and freedom” is now on my reading list!
Thanks for these reflections, Folke. I have logged commons-based peer production for the Examples and Resources lists on this page and the Partnership Culture page.