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E-raamat: Releasing the Commons: Rethinking the futures of the commons

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The fate of the commons has never seemed more parlous, with climate change, population growth, and competition for scarce resources seemingly threatening our greatest common property, the planet itself.

This book moves beyond seeing the commons in the past tense, an entity passed over from the public into the private, to reimagine the commons as a process, a contest of force, a reconstitution, and a site of convening practices. It highlights new spaces of gathering opening up, such as the digital commons, and new practices of being in common, such as community economies and solidarity networks. The commons is seen as a contested domain of the collective and as a changing way of being in common, with the balance poised in the tensile play between political economy and social innovation. The book focuses on the possibility of recovering a future in which more can be held by the many, focusing on three concepts: nation and nature as a commons, publics and rights, and bodies, concerning the management of lives and livelihoods. Across these three passage points, the book finds evidence of a commons under attack but also defended in fragile though promising ways.

List of figures
vii
List of tables
viii
Notes on contributors ix
Acknowledgements xii
1 Thinking the commons
1(17)
Ash Amin
Philip Howell
2 The commons and offshore worlds
18(13)
John Urry
3 Politics in common in the digital age
31(18)
Natalie Fenton
4 Commons feeling in animal welfare and online libertarian activism
49(17)
Adam Reed
5 The liminal paracommons of future natural resource efficiency gains
66(23)
Bruce Lankford
6 The right to not be excluded: common property and the struggle to stay put
89(18)
Nicholas Blomley
7 International humanitarian law and the possibility of the commons
107(19)
Alex Jeffrey
8 The shrinking commons and uneven geographies of development
126(19)
Sarah A. Radcliffe
9 The urban metabolic commons: rights, civil society, and subaltern struggle
145(16)
Colin Mcfarlane
Renu Desai
10 Inroads into altruism
161(16)
Marilyn Strathern
11 Revisiting a bodily commons: enclosures and openings in the bioeconomy
177(15)
Maria Fannin
12 Com mooing as a postcapitalist politics
192(21)
J.K. Gibson-Graham
Jenny Cameron
Stephen Healy
Index 213
Ash Amin is Professor of Geography in the Department of Geography at the University of Cambridge, UK.

Philip Howell is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Geography at the University of Cambridge, UK.