Common goods are commonplace in a myriad of cultures, since antiquity to the Industrial Revolution. Usually, common goods are natural resources that are used and managed by a community. In pre-industrial societies, these goods play a very important role in guaranteeing the survival of common people – those who do not own lands, as they are not members of clergy, nobility or royalty. In England, from the 17th to the 19th century, landowners privatise common lands. This process leaves peasants without many of their livelihood, so they are forced to work for a wage. This lays the foundations to transition from a feudal to a capitalistic economic system. Due to the privatisations, peasants have no choice but to move to cities to find jobs. They...
The commons literature makes much of the changes within the traditional land use sectors of develope...
This paper begins with a simple question—‘how can you steal something that no one owns’? Though a si...
This paper begins with a simple question—‘how can you steal something that no one owns’? Though a si...
Despite centuries of enclosure and commodification, the commons remain an enduring way of organising...
In many times and in many areas, production was organized around a pool of commons— resources that w...
Uncovering the rich heritage of common ownership which existed before the dominance of capitalist pr...
El progresivo adelgazamiento del Estado del Bienestar y la privatización de bienes y servicios públi...
The authors explore the transformation of common lands in Spain in the second half of the 20th Centu...
The Llobregat River crosses the Province of Barcelona (in the north-east of the Iberian Peninsula) s...
This paper describes an historical case of management of common lands, and their survival and transf...
Abstract & Contents The idea for this book came slowly following a gradual collection of blog pos...
This dissertation contributes to the long-standing debate between those who argue that the enclosure...
Common properties refers to those lands which by tradition rural communities own collectively. They ...
International audienceThis article seeks to contribute to the elaboration of an analytically solid d...
This paper introduces the concept of commoning in circular economies, and explores how commons repro...
The commons literature makes much of the changes within the traditional land use sectors of develope...
This paper begins with a simple question—‘how can you steal something that no one owns’? Though a si...
This paper begins with a simple question—‘how can you steal something that no one owns’? Though a si...
Despite centuries of enclosure and commodification, the commons remain an enduring way of organising...
In many times and in many areas, production was organized around a pool of commons— resources that w...
Uncovering the rich heritage of common ownership which existed before the dominance of capitalist pr...
El progresivo adelgazamiento del Estado del Bienestar y la privatización de bienes y servicios públi...
The authors explore the transformation of common lands in Spain in the second half of the 20th Centu...
The Llobregat River crosses the Province of Barcelona (in the north-east of the Iberian Peninsula) s...
This paper describes an historical case of management of common lands, and their survival and transf...
Abstract & Contents The idea for this book came slowly following a gradual collection of blog pos...
This dissertation contributes to the long-standing debate between those who argue that the enclosure...
Common properties refers to those lands which by tradition rural communities own collectively. They ...
International audienceThis article seeks to contribute to the elaboration of an analytically solid d...
This paper introduces the concept of commoning in circular economies, and explores how commons repro...
The commons literature makes much of the changes within the traditional land use sectors of develope...
This paper begins with a simple question—‘how can you steal something that no one owns’? Though a si...
This paper begins with a simple question—‘how can you steal something that no one owns’? Though a si...