Through an Ecology of the Commons, by Bauwens and Ramos can be found here. The abstract:
"Our main hypothesis in this paper is that in the current conjuncture, we
are moving towards a ‘dominance’ of a ‘commons’ format for societal
development. The commons format assumes a ‘third’ mode of development
that indicates civil society and community as critical initiators and
guardians of common value. The emerging commons model should be
distinguished from both the regulation of capitalism by
social-democracy, and state-centric Soviet types of socialism. Just as a
full-fledged capitalist system could be seen as starting with the seed
forms developed in the medieval city-states, so a future commons-centric
society can be hypothesized from currently emerging commons-based seed
forms. We believe that just as the revolutions bringing full-fledged
capitalism were preceded by the development of capitalists and their
seed forms, so a commons-based systemic change is necessarily the result
of commoners developing their own seed forms. Therefore, the creation
of a systemic ecology of the commons becomes an essential strategy for
social change. The key approach for emancipation is no longer a
redistribution of market value, or a state-centric appropriation of
productive assets, but an interweaving of commons-based production and
redistribution."
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