An engaging and intimate journey of personal and political discovery.
Incisive, penetrating, and inspirational, this is essential reading for all engaged citizens with a stake in co-creating a better future for all. As the liberal state fights for its life, is it time for the partner state?
This book counters the dominant and destructive story that we are polarized, violent, selfish, and destined to consume everything in sight. That is not who we are.
A lively account of a community working to combat suburban sprawl, and how it discovers how to live responsibly on the land.
Whose Common Future?: Reclaiming the Commons : the Ecologist
Whose Common Future?: Reclaiming the Commons
Building on the work of Elinor Ostrom (Governing the Commons) the author examines how the different shared goods of a democratic society are shaped by technology and demonstrates how club goods, common pool resources, and public goods are ...
is also known by many other names that may or may not imply a subtle variation regarding the author such as: ethnography, virtual ethnography, online ethnography, webnography, etc. Whatever the case may be, digital ethnography implies a ...
... reclaiming the commons. I will focus on the role of educational institutions, notably universities, in creating a seedbed for a new commons in the technological society. In the New Worlds of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, as ...
... commons . The " Reclaiming the Commons ” movement has certainly found a momentum in recent times . My new Earth Governance book tries to make the case that international law and the United Nations are not only in need , but ready to ...
Christopher M. Raymond, Gerald Singh, Karina Benessaiah, Joanna R. Bernhardt, Jordan Levine, Harry Nelson, Nancy J. Turner, Bryan Norton, Jordan Tam and Kai M.A. Chan, “Ecosystem Services Ethnobotanist Named to Order of Canada,” ...