Difference between revisions of "Category:The Commons"

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(Created page with "{{Ebauche}} "I believe the commons—at once a paradigm, a discourse, an ethic, and a set of social practices—holds great promise !...). More than a political philosophy or policy agenda, the commons is an active, living process. It is less a noun than a verb because it is primarily about the social practices of commoning—acts of mutual support, conflict, negotiation, communication and experimentation that are needed to create systems to manage shared resources. Thi...")
 
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"I believe the commons—at once a paradigm, a discourse, an ethic, and a set of social practices—holds great promise !...). More than a political philosophy or policy agenda, the commons is an active, living process. It is less a noun than a verb because it is primarily about the social practices of commoning—acts of mutual support, conflict, negotiation, communication and experimentation that are needed to create systems to manage shared resources. This process blends production (self provisioning), governance, culture, and personal interests into one integrated system."<ref>[https://www.socioeco.org/bdf_fiche-document-4865_en.html]</ref>.
"I believe the commons—at once a paradigm, a discourse, an ethic, and a set of social practices—holds great promise !...). More than a political philosophy or policy agenda, the commons is an active, living process. It is less a noun than a verb because it is primarily about the social practices of commoning—acts of mutual support, conflict, negotiation, communication and experimentation that are needed to create systems to manage shared resources. This process blends production (self provisioning), governance, culture, and personal interests into one integrated system."<ref>[https://www.socioeco.org/bdf_fiche-document-4865_en.html]</ref>.
== References ==

Revision as of 11:55, 9 February 2023

Template:Ebauche

"I believe the commons—at once a paradigm, a discourse, an ethic, and a set of social practices—holds great promise !...). More than a political philosophy or policy agenda, the commons is an active, living process. It is less a noun than a verb because it is primarily about the social practices of commoning—acts of mutual support, conflict, negotiation, communication and experimentation that are needed to create systems to manage shared resources. This process blends production (self provisioning), governance, culture, and personal interests into one integrated system."[1].

References

Pages in category "The Commons"

The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total.