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Latest revision as of 18:05, 19 May 2010
Building a definition of the commons
Rough approach at a definition of a commons: a resource governed by a (more or less) defined population exerting symmetric control over its use through a series of (more or less) defined rules in order to provide free and predictable access for that population to that resource.
Symmetric control
- each member has symmetric control over how the resource is used
- no arbitrary system of permission
- rules, when instituted, are instituted equally among all users
- no member given privileged access
- no actor can legally act upon another by his or her will
System of rules
- commons can be distinguished from each other along two axes: closed/open, regulated/unregulated
- the regulations of the commons can be formal or norm-based
- calls on the common pool rarely measured very strictly
- constraints on commons resources may be social, legal, or regulatory
Free (as in freedom) and predictable access
- free for all, predictable for all (this comment is later contradicted. Seems he wants to say, rather that commons are priced equally for all members)
- guarantees certain degree of freedom and predictability of access to resources
Open membership
- only requirement seems to be that you need to want to participate in it
- there is a (more or less) well defined population that has a say over how the resource is going to be used
- motivations for contributions seem irrelevant
- commons often need common purpose
Different in kind from markets
- resources of commons often rival resources in market. Difference is freedom and predictability of access
- commons not necessarily the most efficient use of resources
- however, there are predictable conditions for when commons more efficient than markets
- more likely than other forms of production to identify the person best suited for the job
- better able than markets to allocate small quanta of resources
- possibility of commons regimes is dependent on technology
Self-organizing, self-sustaining
- clustering of attention / resource use within a commons provides structure and accreditation
- within information commons, so long as the information is easily share-able, a navigable order will likely appear
- for information commons to survive and thrive, might need substantial background knowledge
- commons often create a sense of common purpose
- commons often perceived as less secure than enclosed systems
Consequences of the commons
- within the sphere of public information, more expansive commons almost certainly improve human autonomy rather than undermine it
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