In recent years, the international commons movement has increasingly joined forces with the global movement of municipalities, putting common ideas on the political agenda in many western countries. Commons have been widely discussed in literature. Broadly understood, commons refers to the practices for collective development, ownership, management, and fair access to resources and artifacts (social, cultural, economic, political, environmental, and technological). However, the concept remains vague, complex, and unclear, especially when it comes to different contexts in which new definitions are needed to better understand the societal and cultural dimensions of urban co...
Despite centuries of enclosure and commodification, the commons remain an enduring way of organising...
Despite centuries of enclosure and commodification, the commons remain an enduring way of organising...
This paper begins with a simple question—‘how can you steal something that no one owns’? Though a si...
This thematic issue puts "urban commoning" centre stage. Urban commoning constitutes the practice of...
© EURE. There is a growing interest and emerging academic literature regarding the commons and their...
© EURE. There is a growing interest and emerging academic literature regarding the commons and their...
© EURE. There is a growing interest and emerging academic literature regarding the commons and their...
The proposition of this paper presents Urban Commoning as a counteraction to the current global tren...
International audienceThis book rethinks the city by examining its various forms of collectivity – t...
International audienceThis book rethinks the city by examining its various forms of collectivity – t...
As rapid urbanization intensifies around the world, so do contestations over how city space is utili...
This thematic issue puts “urban commoning” centre stage. Urban commoning constitutes the practice of...
Many of the contemporary debates on urban commons lack an anti-capitalist approach. In addition, a n...
Many of the contemporary debates on urban commons lack an anti-capitalist approach. In addition, a n...
Many of the contemporary debates on urban commons lack an anti-capitalist approach. In addition, a n...
Despite centuries of enclosure and commodification, the commons remain an enduring way of organising...
Despite centuries of enclosure and commodification, the commons remain an enduring way of organising...
This paper begins with a simple question—‘how can you steal something that no one owns’? Though a si...
This thematic issue puts "urban commoning" centre stage. Urban commoning constitutes the practice of...
© EURE. There is a growing interest and emerging academic literature regarding the commons and their...
© EURE. There is a growing interest and emerging academic literature regarding the commons and their...
© EURE. There is a growing interest and emerging academic literature regarding the commons and their...
The proposition of this paper presents Urban Commoning as a counteraction to the current global tren...
International audienceThis book rethinks the city by examining its various forms of collectivity – t...
International audienceThis book rethinks the city by examining its various forms of collectivity – t...
As rapid urbanization intensifies around the world, so do contestations over how city space is utili...
This thematic issue puts “urban commoning” centre stage. Urban commoning constitutes the practice of...
Many of the contemporary debates on urban commons lack an anti-capitalist approach. In addition, a n...
Many of the contemporary debates on urban commons lack an anti-capitalist approach. In addition, a n...
Many of the contemporary debates on urban commons lack an anti-capitalist approach. In addition, a n...
Despite centuries of enclosure and commodification, the commons remain an enduring way of organising...
Despite centuries of enclosure and commodification, the commons remain an enduring way of organising...
This paper begins with a simple question—‘how can you steal something that no one owns’? Though a si...