Law for the Commons
The Law for the Commons Wiki is a first attempt to survey the more significant realms of commons-based legal innovation today. Besides providing a rough inventory of dozens of projects and theaters of legal engagement, this wiki seeks to treat these very disparate bodies of law and legal activism as a single field of inquiry, Law for the Commons. If we are serious about catalyzing systemic change, we need to develop a coherent vision for the role that state law must play, however imperfectly, and develop legal and policy mechanisms that work.
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WELCOME TO THE LAW FOR THE COMMONS WIKI
This wiki contains resources on the history of commons-based law and emerging legal innovations that seek to empower commoners and protect commons. Historically, commons have had a problematic relationship with conventional law, which generally reflects the mindset and priorities of the sovereign (monarch, nation-state, corporation) and not the lived experiences and practices of commoners. Still, in grappling with political, economic and legal realities, commoners often find ways to secure control over their common wealth, livelihoods and modes of commoning. Often, their solutions entail makeshift working arrangements with conventional law. Such a struggle is one factor that led to the Magna Carta and Charter of the Forest in the early thirteenth century. It is also what is spurring many commoners today to invent creative new types of law – formal, social, technological – to protect their shared interests, assets and social relationships. This wiki is intended as an introduction to key documents in the history of Law for the Commons, and as a survey of some of the more notable initiatives to invent contemporary forms of commons law in a variety of contexts and locations. Find out more... Who's Behind the Law for the Commons Wiki?David Bollier [1] of the Commons Strategies Group prepared the initial curation of documents (August 15, 2015), identifying key clusters of commons-law activity and relevant literature and websites. The listings below derive from that initial compilation, and were augmented and placed on this wiki by Michel Bauwens, founder of the P2P Foundation and co-founder of the Commons Strategies Group, in collaboration with Stacco Troncoso of the P2P Foundation and the Commons Media Collective. This project, supported by the Heinrich Böll Foundation, is itself a commons, open to all contributions, and intended for the benefit of all who need it. If you'd like to add your feedback and help build this wiki, please read on. WIKI HELPFirst time working with a Wiki? Here's the Wiki help page. We suggest you follow this 5 minute wikitext tutorial in our Sandbox, with our cheat sheet.
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New Organizational FormsThere is a great deal of experimentation going on with new organizational forms because old structures, whether for-profit or nonprofit, do not adequately recognize and support the types of commoning that people are doing or aspire to do.
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Cooperative LawThere are a number of legal and organizational innovations transforming co-operatives these days, making them more oriented to commoning and the common good than just marketplace success. |
State PoliciesThe deficiencies of the nation-state as a form of governance are becoming increasingly clear. The mismatch between archaic forms of national and international law and the unmet needs of people and the environment is causing new tensions – as well as new proposals seeking to re-imagine state policy and commoning. |
Stakeholder TrustsStakeholder Trusts are a species of large-scale commons that distributes revenues from a shared asset, typically a natural resource, and distributes it to citizens with a recognized “stake” in the resource. Stakeholder trusts are also touted as “common wealth trusts” that can safeguard natural and social resources that are our collective inheritance. |