Editorial: Urban commons in dispute

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Marino, Cintia de Castro
Data de Publicação: 2021
Outros Autores: Maziviero, Maria Carolina
Tipo de documento: Artigo
Idioma: eng
por
Título da fonte: Revista de Gestão Ambiental e Sustentabilidade - GeAS
Texto Completo: https://periodicos.uninove.br/geas/article/view/19831
Resumo: There is growing interest in the field of urban studies on commons, both in theoretical approaches and in studies that describe experiences approaching their effective use. The idea of the common as a driver in the struggle for a world against privatizations and fences – that is, beyond the logic of merchandise and private property – is taken up in the political imagery of movements and activists from the alterglobalism of the 1990s and gets consolidated with the new cycle of global protests that took place during the second decade of the 21st century.Common goods consist on that which must be protected from capitalist appropriation and the logic of ownership (of the State or of the market): resources, spaces, ways of life, knowledge, and so on. It is also a political principle – not to be granted, but to be instituted. This means that something is placed “in common”, something that depends on a constant political act of appropriation, self-management and common action. In addition, the movement of commons does not see the State as an instrument of defense and market regulation. It is a permanent struggle that sees coactivity as a fundamental instrument of political action against capital, in opposition even to the State, which acts as a market partner in capitalism.One of the biggest concerns of the present is that natural resources, which are essential to life – such as water, coasts, rivers and forests are at risk of being fenced and privatized. This concern is no different in the space of cities. Urban commons include so-called public goods and services: parks, transportation, sanitation systems, garbage collection, universities and public schools, etc. The issue of commons is quite broad, not limited to public spaces or goods, also encompassing intangible aspects. Cultural and knowledge production methods are common goods.Elinor Ostrom (2015) was a pioneer in publishing about the common in the 1990s. She was a US political economist who won the 2009 Nobel Prize for this work. She sought an empirical analysis of case studies focused mainly on economic, legal, and administrative management of the common. The study was the first to see positive aspects in the management of common goods, previously regarded as non-renewable resources in constant process of degradation. Focused on local communities and small groups that collaboratively organized for self-management, the work showed that an institutional composition of autonomous arrangements for the management of resources and work on a local scale was possible. The author, considered a neo-institutionalist, pointed to modes of governance in which community practices could gain centrality within the institutional apparatus. In this sense, it did not seek to replace the institutional mechanism, but to expand it through forms of self-management and self-organization.The most recent work by Dardot and Laval (2017) on the common seeks to theorize about the concept, in order to replace it in contemporary times as an instrument to fight against neoliberal reasoning. The etymology of the term in Greek (koinón) and Latin (munus) always implied a certain reciprocity, meaning both obligation and activity. Regarding the origins of the question, in the rise of the Greek city, man gained a kind of second life, belonging to two different spheres of existence: private life, or family life, and life in common, or politics. Later, however, Roman political doctrine nationalized the common, the right to res publica or to the “public thing”, understood as controlled by the State in a restricted way. Thus, the institution of private property comes from Roman law, the dominium, which allows total power and exclusive enjoyment over a thing. The idea of ownership excluded things from common use and began to negate the activity of cooperation.Still regarding the trajectory of the concept, according to the authors, between the 12th and 15th centuries, the Church tried to establish its own vision of the common as something universal and divine. Man was supposed to give up any property or possession, adopting a way of life dedicated to the "common" or "public thing" in the service of the community and of God. However, in the 17th century, the term found ambiguity in philosophical language, with a connotation far from the divine. It acquired a sense of vulgar, ordinary, of the people. That which is found everywhere and not owned by anyone. Over time, the Church aligned itself with the feudal state, but also maintained a current that is identified today with a communist vision, supporting the struggle of social movements.In the history of communist ideology, the term “common” has had three distinct meanings. First, the common was something shared that should never acquire unitary or shared value. Second, as defended by Marx, the common was the association of producers or free men. The existing form of ownership was associated with collective work. And the third was state communism, ownership by the State, seen as a step toward reaching a common without private property. From the 1980s on, the experiences of communism attested that the common accomplished by the State meant the destruction of the common by the State, which proved to be bureaucratic, authoritarian and corrupt. The historical experiences of attempts to implement socialism did not dissociate bureaucratic management from the State's economy, but rather accentuated its statist tendency.Those authors Dardot and Laval (2017) also contribute with reflections on the current struggle for the common. The challenge would be to build a new type of city based on the commitment of all citizens and on matters of common interest. It does not always depend on “rescuing” assets owned by the State or private property, but rather removing them from bureaucratic management and placing them under popular management. This is about community political power. With the neoliberal shift from the 1980s onward and the increasing privatization of state property and services, the concept seems to gain a new emphasis. After all, reference to the term “public” often means something that is publicly owned, that is, owned by the State, something at risk of changing ownership, of being privatized or restricted.Hardt and Negri's (2016) analysis of the common s is focused on building a revolutionary horizon. According to the authors, after 1970, capitalist production ceased to be based on material production and shifted its focus to social relations and forms of life: “a predatory operation that works through expropriation, transforming both public and common wealth into private property” (Hardt & Negri, 2016, p.153). As such, capitalist accumulation is increasingly external to the industrial production process, and the class struggle loses its strength, as it used to be supported by the union movement.As a critical reflection about anti-capitalist social and political movements that have emerged in recent decades, those authors argue that resistance is only possible based on the struggle for the common, against the privatization of all aspects of social life. It would be a collective escape from the relationship with capital. For the authors, the fight must be constant, since collective production is captured by capitalism and sold as a product: the commons constructed collectively today gains market value tomorrow.According to Harvey (2012, 2014), citizens must exercise their collective right to shape the city through greater regulation and democratic controls over the surplus capital used in urbanization. He defends a model of territorial co-production. Contrary to the acknowledgement that cities become commodities, the author points to a transformative agenda present in the citizen's collectivity: collective action.Nevertheless, Harvey presents some contradictions in the logic of the commons. A group of commoners must constantly renegotiate their identity and rearticulate the interests of the collective, since over time individuals develop desires in different directions. However, regarding the desired horizontality of management: making decisions in a purely horizontal way can often be a time-consuming and ineffective strategy (Harvey, 2014, p. 138).Another ambiguity appears in the use of the term “enclosure”; Harvey illustrates how the question can be used both positively and negatively within the capitalist system. Enclosure was a term adopted for the dispossession of communal productive land in England during the 18th and 19th centuries. During this period, common use lands were enclosed, and their use was restricted. Since then, the term enclosure has been used for the dispossession of the commons, that is, the appropriation by the private of what was previously in the public domain. For the author, the contradiction in the term appears when the enclosure is used in defense of everything that has not yet been submitted to capital. For example, by restricting a forest in order to protect it, one can, as a consequence, limit traditional and sustainable, productive but non-offensive uses by a given local community.Bollier (2016) stresses that the issue is not new. Currently, the discussion begins with understanding the limitations of the market economy, however, many traditional communities and indigenous peoples achieve an intimate familiarity with common goods. It is a way of life built over hundreds or even thousands of years. Regarding practices involving the enclosure of knowledge and culture, the author exposes antagonisms of legal aspects and instruments such as copyright and trademark. In scientific production, it denounces serious ethical conflicts of commoditization of the university through financing and partnerships with large companies, which often place constraints in the direction of research and publications on the results.The discussion of urban commons poses a series of questions and challenges to be explored, ranging from thinking about possible articulations between the legal framework and concrete experiences, seeking to consolidate the achievements of collective action, the legal and financing innovations that subsidize the allowance of the city to its citizens; to the challenges intrinsic to the commons, such as co-management and the process of constituting the community, which does not pre-exist, but is established during the experience.The struggle by means of the defense of common resources, managed collectively, is seen here as a form of collective construction by proposing community political power – or a collective political subject, based on local articulation and characterizing a political principle, not to be assigned, but to be instituted. This special edition of Revista GeAS rounds up articles that contribute to the issue of urban commons from various perspectives, including descriptive and conceptual approaches that propose other ways of existing in this becoming-world, the transformative power of the commons, the fissures and possibilities that it promotes, as well as its territorialized implications as a utopian horizon. The articles allow us to explore diverse aspects of this reflection.
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spelling Editorial: Urban commons in disputeEditorial: Comuns urbanos em disputaComuns urbanosAutogestãoAção coletiva.There is growing interest in the field of urban studies on commons, both in theoretical approaches and in studies that describe experiences approaching their effective use. The idea of the common as a driver in the struggle for a world against privatizations and fences – that is, beyond the logic of merchandise and private property – is taken up in the political imagery of movements and activists from the alterglobalism of the 1990s and gets consolidated with the new cycle of global protests that took place during the second decade of the 21st century.Common goods consist on that which must be protected from capitalist appropriation and the logic of ownership (of the State or of the market): resources, spaces, ways of life, knowledge, and so on. It is also a political principle – not to be granted, but to be instituted. This means that something is placed “in common”, something that depends on a constant political act of appropriation, self-management and common action. In addition, the movement of commons does not see the State as an instrument of defense and market regulation. It is a permanent struggle that sees coactivity as a fundamental instrument of political action against capital, in opposition even to the State, which acts as a market partner in capitalism.One of the biggest concerns of the present is that natural resources, which are essential to life – such as water, coasts, rivers and forests are at risk of being fenced and privatized. This concern is no different in the space of cities. Urban commons include so-called public goods and services: parks, transportation, sanitation systems, garbage collection, universities and public schools, etc. The issue of commons is quite broad, not limited to public spaces or goods, also encompassing intangible aspects. Cultural and knowledge production methods are common goods.Elinor Ostrom (2015) was a pioneer in publishing about the common in the 1990s. She was a US political economist who won the 2009 Nobel Prize for this work. She sought an empirical analysis of case studies focused mainly on economic, legal, and administrative management of the common. The study was the first to see positive aspects in the management of common goods, previously regarded as non-renewable resources in constant process of degradation. Focused on local communities and small groups that collaboratively organized for self-management, the work showed that an institutional composition of autonomous arrangements for the management of resources and work on a local scale was possible. The author, considered a neo-institutionalist, pointed to modes of governance in which community practices could gain centrality within the institutional apparatus. In this sense, it did not seek to replace the institutional mechanism, but to expand it through forms of self-management and self-organization.The most recent work by Dardot and Laval (2017) on the common seeks to theorize about the concept, in order to replace it in contemporary times as an instrument to fight against neoliberal reasoning. The etymology of the term in Greek (koinón) and Latin (munus) always implied a certain reciprocity, meaning both obligation and activity. Regarding the origins of the question, in the rise of the Greek city, man gained a kind of second life, belonging to two different spheres of existence: private life, or family life, and life in common, or politics. Later, however, Roman political doctrine nationalized the common, the right to res publica or to the “public thing”, understood as controlled by the State in a restricted way. Thus, the institution of private property comes from Roman law, the dominium, which allows total power and exclusive enjoyment over a thing. The idea of ownership excluded things from common use and began to negate the activity of cooperation.Still regarding the trajectory of the concept, according to the authors, between the 12th and 15th centuries, the Church tried to establish its own vision of the common as something universal and divine. Man was supposed to give up any property or possession, adopting a way of life dedicated to the "common" or "public thing" in the service of the community and of God. However, in the 17th century, the term found ambiguity in philosophical language, with a connotation far from the divine. It acquired a sense of vulgar, ordinary, of the people. That which is found everywhere and not owned by anyone. Over time, the Church aligned itself with the feudal state, but also maintained a current that is identified today with a communist vision, supporting the struggle of social movements.In the history of communist ideology, the term “common” has had three distinct meanings. First, the common was something shared that should never acquire unitary or shared value. Second, as defended by Marx, the common was the association of producers or free men. The existing form of ownership was associated with collective work. And the third was state communism, ownership by the State, seen as a step toward reaching a common without private property. From the 1980s on, the experiences of communism attested that the common accomplished by the State meant the destruction of the common by the State, which proved to be bureaucratic, authoritarian and corrupt. The historical experiences of attempts to implement socialism did not dissociate bureaucratic management from the State's economy, but rather accentuated its statist tendency.Those authors Dardot and Laval (2017) also contribute with reflections on the current struggle for the common. The challenge would be to build a new type of city based on the commitment of all citizens and on matters of common interest. It does not always depend on “rescuing” assets owned by the State or private property, but rather removing them from bureaucratic management and placing them under popular management. This is about community political power. With the neoliberal shift from the 1980s onward and the increasing privatization of state property and services, the concept seems to gain a new emphasis. After all, reference to the term “public” often means something that is publicly owned, that is, owned by the State, something at risk of changing ownership, of being privatized or restricted.Hardt and Negri's (2016) analysis of the common s is focused on building a revolutionary horizon. According to the authors, after 1970, capitalist production ceased to be based on material production and shifted its focus to social relations and forms of life: “a predatory operation that works through expropriation, transforming both public and common wealth into private property” (Hardt & Negri, 2016, p.153). As such, capitalist accumulation is increasingly external to the industrial production process, and the class struggle loses its strength, as it used to be supported by the union movement.As a critical reflection about anti-capitalist social and political movements that have emerged in recent decades, those authors argue that resistance is only possible based on the struggle for the common, against the privatization of all aspects of social life. It would be a collective escape from the relationship with capital. For the authors, the fight must be constant, since collective production is captured by capitalism and sold as a product: the commons constructed collectively today gains market value tomorrow.According to Harvey (2012, 2014), citizens must exercise their collective right to shape the city through greater regulation and democratic controls over the surplus capital used in urbanization. He defends a model of territorial co-production. Contrary to the acknowledgement that cities become commodities, the author points to a transformative agenda present in the citizen's collectivity: collective action.Nevertheless, Harvey presents some contradictions in the logic of the commons. A group of commoners must constantly renegotiate their identity and rearticulate the interests of the collective, since over time individuals develop desires in different directions. However, regarding the desired horizontality of management: making decisions in a purely horizontal way can often be a time-consuming and ineffective strategy (Harvey, 2014, p. 138).Another ambiguity appears in the use of the term “enclosure”; Harvey illustrates how the question can be used both positively and negatively within the capitalist system. Enclosure was a term adopted for the dispossession of communal productive land in England during the 18th and 19th centuries. During this period, common use lands were enclosed, and their use was restricted. Since then, the term enclosure has been used for the dispossession of the commons, that is, the appropriation by the private of what was previously in the public domain. For the author, the contradiction in the term appears when the enclosure is used in defense of everything that has not yet been submitted to capital. For example, by restricting a forest in order to protect it, one can, as a consequence, limit traditional and sustainable, productive but non-offensive uses by a given local community.Bollier (2016) stresses that the issue is not new. Currently, the discussion begins with understanding the limitations of the market economy, however, many traditional communities and indigenous peoples achieve an intimate familiarity with common goods. It is a way of life built over hundreds or even thousands of years. Regarding practices involving the enclosure of knowledge and culture, the author exposes antagonisms of legal aspects and instruments such as copyright and trademark. In scientific production, it denounces serious ethical conflicts of commoditization of the university through financing and partnerships with large companies, which often place constraints in the direction of research and publications on the results.The discussion of urban commons poses a series of questions and challenges to be explored, ranging from thinking about possible articulations between the legal framework and concrete experiences, seeking to consolidate the achievements of collective action, the legal and financing innovations that subsidize the allowance of the city to its citizens; to the challenges intrinsic to the commons, such as co-management and the process of constituting the community, which does not pre-exist, but is established during the experience.The struggle by means of the defense of common resources, managed collectively, is seen here as a form of collective construction by proposing community political power – or a collective political subject, based on local articulation and characterizing a political principle, not to be assigned, but to be instituted. This special edition of Revista GeAS rounds up articles that contribute to the issue of urban commons from various perspectives, including descriptive and conceptual approaches that propose other ways of existing in this becoming-world, the transformative power of the commons, the fissures and possibilities that it promotes, as well as its territorialized implications as a utopian horizon. The articles allow us to explore diverse aspects of this reflection.Há um interesse crescente no campo dos estudos urbanos sobre o tema dos comuns, tanto em abordagens teóricas quanto em estudos que descrevem experiências que se aproximam de sua aplicação. A ideia do comum como bandeira de luta e reivindicação do mundo contra as privatizações e cercamentos – ou seja, para além da lógica da mercadoria e da propriedade – é retomada no imaginário político de movimentos e ativistas a partir dos movimentos altermundialistas dos anos 1990 e se consolida com o novo ciclo de protestos globais que ocorreram durante a segunda década do século XXI.O comum corresponde àquilo que deve ser protegido da apropriação capitalista e da lógica de propriedade (do Estado ou do mercado): recursos, espaços, formas de vida, conhecimento, entre outros. É também um princípio político, não a ser atribuído, mas à ser instituído. Isso significa que algo é posto em comum, e isso depende de um ato político constante de apropriação, de autogestão e de um agir comum. Além disso, o movimento dos comuns não enxerga o Estado como instrumento de defesa e regulação de mercado. É uma luta permanente que enxerga a coatividade como instrumento fundamental de ação política contra o capital, em oposição inclusive ao Estado, que age como parceiro do mercado no capitalismo.Uma das maiores preocupações atuais é que bens naturais essenciais para a vida humana – como água, costas, rios e florestas – estão correndo o risco de cercamentos e privatizações. Essa preocupação não é diferente no espaço das cidades. Os comuns urbanos incluem os chamados bens e serviços públicos: parques, transporte, sistemas de saneamento, coleta de lixo, universidades e escolas públicas etc. A questão dos comuns é bastante ampla, não se limitando aos espaços ou bens públicos, igualmente abrange aspectos imateriais. Métodos de produção cultural e do conhecimento são bens comuns.Elinor Ostrom (2015) foi pioneira ao publicar sobre o comum na década de 1990. A economista política estadunidense, que ganhou o prêmio Nobel em 2009 com esse trabalho, buscou uma análise empírica de estudos de caso voltada principalmente à gestão econômica, jurídica e administrativa do comum. O estudo foi o primeiro que vislumbrou pontos positivos sobre a gestão dos bens comuns, antes vistos como recursos não renováveis em constante processo de degradação. Voltado para comunidades locais e grupos pequenos que se organizavam colaborativamente para autogestão, o trabalho mostrou que era possível uma composição institucional de arranjos autônomos para a gestão de recursos e trabalhos em escala local. A autora, considerada uma neo-institucionalista, apontava modos de governança nas quais as práticas comunitárias pudessem ganhar centralidade dentro do aparato institucional. Neste sentido, não buscava substituir o mecanismo institucional, mas ampliá-lo através do protagonismo de formas de autogestão e auto-organização.   O mais recente trabalho de Dardot e Laval (2017) sobre o comum procura teorizar sobre o conceito, a fim de recolocá-lo na contemporaneidade como instrumento de luta para superação da racionalidade neoliberal. A etimologia do termo em grego (koinón) e em latim (munus) implicou sempre certa reciprocidade, significando ao mesmo tempo obrigação e atividade. Sobre as origens da questão, no surgimento da cidade grega, o homem ganhou uma espécie de segunda vida, pertencendo a duas esferas de existência: a sua vida privada, ou da família, e a vida em comum, ou política. No entanto, posteriormente, a doutrina política romana estatizou o comum, o direito à res publica ou à “coisa pública”, entendida esta, de forma restrita, como controlada pelo Estado. Assim, a instituição da propriedade privada advém do direito romano, o dominium, que permite total poder e usufruto exclusivo sobre uma coisa. A ideia de propriedade excluiu as coisas do uso comum e passou a negar a atividade de cooperação.Ainda sobre a trajetória do conceito, segundo os autores, entre os séculos XII e XV, a Igreja tentou estabelecer sua própria visão do comum como algo universal e divino. O homem deveria abdicar de qualquer propriedade ou posse, adotando um modo de vida dedicado ao “comum” ou à “coisa pública” a serviço da comunidade e de Deus. No entanto, no século XVII o termo encontrou ambiguidade na linguagem filosófica, com uma conotação longe do divino. Passou a ter sentido de vulgar, ordinário e do povo. O que se encontra por toda parte e que não é posse de ninguém. Com o tempo, a Igreja alinhou-se ao Estado feudal, mas também manteve uma corrente que hoje é identificada pela visão comunista que apoia e acompanha a luta de movimentos sociais.No curso da ideologia comunista, o termo comum teve três significados distintos. No primeiro, o comum era algo compartilhado que nunca deveria adquirir um valor unitário ou a ser repartido. O segundo, defendido por Marx, tinha o comum como a associação de produtores ou de homens livres. A forma de propriedade também estava associada ao trabalho coletivo. E o terceiro foi o comunismo de Estado, de propriedade estatal, visto como uma etapa para atingir uma forma desprovida de propriedade privada. A partir dos anos 1980, as experiências de comunismo atestaram que o comum realizado pelo Estado foi a destruição do comum pelo Estado, mostrou-se burocrático, autoritário e corrupto. As experiências históricas de tentativas de implementação do socialismo não dissociaram a gestão burocrática da economia do Estado, mas sim acentuaram sua tendência estatizante.Os autores Dardot e Laval (2017) ainda contribuem com reflexões sobre a atual luta pelo comum. O desafio seria construir um novo tipo de cidade a partir do empenho de todos os habitantes, ou seja, a partir do interesse comum. Nem sempre depende de resgatar bens da propriedade do Estado ou da propriedade privada, mas sim tirá-los de uma gestão burocrática e submetê-los a uma gestão popular. Trata-se do poder político comunitário. Com a guinada neoliberal a partir dos anos 80 e a crescente privatização de propriedades e serviços estatais, o conceito parece ganhar uma nova ênfase. Já que quando nos referimos ao termo “público”, muitas vezes nos referimos a algo de propriedade pública, ou seja, de propriedade do Estado, que corre o risco de ter seu domínio modificado, de ser privatizado ou ter seu acesso restrito.Já a análise de Hardt e Negri (2016) sobre o comum tem seu enfoque na construção de um horizonte revolucionário. Segundo os autores, após 1970, a produção capitalista deixou de ter como base a produção material e passou seu enfoque para as relações sociais e formas de vida: “uma operação predatória que funciona através da desapropriação, transformando em propriedade privada tanto a riqueza pública quando a riqueza produzida socialmente em comum” (Hardt & Negri, 2016, p.153). De tal modo, a acumulação capitalista é cada vez mais externa ao processo de produção industrial, e a luta de classe perde sua força, pois tinha como apoio o movimento sindical.Como contribuição à reflexão dos movimentos sociais e políticos anticapitalistas que surgiram nas últimas décadas, os autores defendem que a resistência só é possível com base na luta pelo comum, contra a privatização de todos os aspectos da vida social. Seria uma fuga coletiva da relação com o capital. Para os autores, a luta deve ser constante, pois a produção coletiva é captada pelo capitalismo e vendida como produto: o comum construído coletivamente hoje ganha valor de mercado amanhã.Para Harvey (2012, 2014), os cidadãos devem exercer seu direito coletivo de moldar a cidade, por meio de maior regulação e controles democráticos sobre o capital excedente empregado na urbanização. Defende um modelo de coprodução territorial. Na contramão da constatação que as cidades se convertem em mercadoria, o autor aponta para uma agenda transformadora presente na coletividade cidadã: o agir coletivo.Não obstante, Harvey apresenta algumas contradições na lógica dos comuns. Um grupo de commoners constantemente deve renegociar sua identidade e rearticular os interesses do coletivo, visto que com o tempo os indivíduos desenvolvem desejos em diversas direções. Porém a respeito da desejada horizontalidade de gestão: a tomada de decisões de maneira puramente horizontal muitas vezes pode ser uma estratégia demorada e ineficaz (Harvey, 2014, p. 138).Outra ambiguidade aparece no uso do termo “cercamento”, Harvey ilustra como a questão pode ser utilizada tanto positivamente quanto negativamente dentro do sistema capitalista. Cercamento foi um termo adotado para despossessão das terras produtivas comunais na Inglaterra durante os séculos XVIII e XIX. Durante esse período, antigas terras de uso comum foram cercadas, restringido seu uso. Desde então, o termo cercamento vem sendo utilizado para a despossessão do comum, ou seja, a apropriação pelo privado daquilo que antes era de domínio público. Para o autor, a contradição no termo aparece quando o cercamento é utilizado em defesa de tudo aquilo que ainda não foi submetido ao capital. Por exemplo, ao restringir uma floresta no sentido de protegê-la, pode-se, por consequência, limitar usos tradicionais e sustentáveis, produtivos mas não ofensivos, de uma determinada comunidade local.Bollier (2016) reforça que a questão não é nova. Atualmente a discussão parte da compreensão das limitações da economia de mercado, no entanto, inúmeras comunidades tradicionais e povos indígenas logram uma familiaridade íntima com os bens comuns. É um modo de vida construído ao longo de centenas ou mesmo milhares de anos. Sobre práticas de cercamento do conhecimento e da cultura, o autor expõe antagonismos de aspectos legais e instrumentos como direitos autorais e marca registrada. Na produção científica, denuncia graves conflitos éticos da mercantilização universitária por meio de financiamento e parcerias com as grandes empresas que, com frequência, restringe o recorte das pesquisas e a ampla divulgação dos resultados.A discussão dos comuns urbanos coloca uma série de questões e desafios a serem aprofundados, que vão desde pensar articulações possíveis entre o marco legal e as experiências concretas, buscando consolidar as conquistas da ação coletiva, as inovações jurídicas e de financiamento que subsidiem o franqueamento da cidade aos cidadãos; aos próprios desafios intrínsecos ao comum, como a cogestão e o processo de constituição da comunidade, que não preexiste, mas se estabelece durante a experiência.A luta por meio da defesa de recursos comuns, geridos coletivamente, é aqui vista como uma forma de construção coletiva, ao propor um poder político comunitário – ou um sujeito político coletivo, baseado na articulação local e também caracteriza um princípio político, não a ser atribuído, mas a ser instituído. A presente edição especial da Revista GeAS reúne artigos que contribuem sobre a questão dos comuns urbanos de variadas perspectivas, incluindo abordagens descritivas e conceituais que propõem outras maneiras de existir neste devir-mundo, a potência transformadora do comum, as fissuras e possibilidades que ele promove, bem como suas implicações territorializadas como horizonte utópico. Os artigos nos permitem aprofundar em diversos aspectos dessa reflexão.Universidade Nove de Julho - UNINOVE2021-04-22info:eu-repo/semantics/articleinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionapplication/pdfapplication/pdfhttps://periodicos.uninove.br/geas/article/view/1983110.5585/geas.v10i1.19831Revista de Gestão Ambiental e Sustentabilidade; v. 10 n. 1 (2021): Fluxo contínuo; e198312316-9834reponame:Revista de Gestão Ambiental e Sustentabilidade - GeASinstname:Universidade Nove de Julho (UNINOVE)instacron:UNINOVEengporhttps://periodicos.uninove.br/geas/article/view/19831/8863https://periodicos.uninove.br/geas/article/view/19831/8864Copyright (c) 2021 Revista de Gestão Ambiental e Sustentabilidadehttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessMarino, Cintia de CastroMaziviero, Maria Carolina2021-12-22T15:29:00Zoai:ojs.periodicos.uninove.br:article/19831Revistahttps://periodicos.uninove.br/geasONGhttps://periodicos.uninove.br/geas/oai||journalgeas@gmail.com2316-98342316-9834opendoar:2021-12-22T15:29Revista de Gestão Ambiental e Sustentabilidade - GeAS - Universidade Nove de Julho (UNINOVE)false
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv Editorial: Urban commons in dispute
Editorial: Comuns urbanos em disputa
title Editorial: Urban commons in dispute
spellingShingle Editorial: Urban commons in dispute
Marino, Cintia de Castro
Comuns urbanos
Autogestão
Ação coletiva.
title_short Editorial: Urban commons in dispute
title_full Editorial: Urban commons in dispute
title_fullStr Editorial: Urban commons in dispute
title_full_unstemmed Editorial: Urban commons in dispute
title_sort Editorial: Urban commons in dispute
author Marino, Cintia de Castro
author_facet Marino, Cintia de Castro
Maziviero, Maria Carolina
author_role author
author2 Maziviero, Maria Carolina
author2_role author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Marino, Cintia de Castro
Maziviero, Maria Carolina
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Comuns urbanos
Autogestão
Ação coletiva.
topic Comuns urbanos
Autogestão
Ação coletiva.
description There is growing interest in the field of urban studies on commons, both in theoretical approaches and in studies that describe experiences approaching their effective use. The idea of the common as a driver in the struggle for a world against privatizations and fences – that is, beyond the logic of merchandise and private property – is taken up in the political imagery of movements and activists from the alterglobalism of the 1990s and gets consolidated with the new cycle of global protests that took place during the second decade of the 21st century.Common goods consist on that which must be protected from capitalist appropriation and the logic of ownership (of the State or of the market): resources, spaces, ways of life, knowledge, and so on. It is also a political principle – not to be granted, but to be instituted. This means that something is placed “in common”, something that depends on a constant political act of appropriation, self-management and common action. In addition, the movement of commons does not see the State as an instrument of defense and market regulation. It is a permanent struggle that sees coactivity as a fundamental instrument of political action against capital, in opposition even to the State, which acts as a market partner in capitalism.One of the biggest concerns of the present is that natural resources, which are essential to life – such as water, coasts, rivers and forests are at risk of being fenced and privatized. This concern is no different in the space of cities. Urban commons include so-called public goods and services: parks, transportation, sanitation systems, garbage collection, universities and public schools, etc. The issue of commons is quite broad, not limited to public spaces or goods, also encompassing intangible aspects. Cultural and knowledge production methods are common goods.Elinor Ostrom (2015) was a pioneer in publishing about the common in the 1990s. She was a US political economist who won the 2009 Nobel Prize for this work. She sought an empirical analysis of case studies focused mainly on economic, legal, and administrative management of the common. The study was the first to see positive aspects in the management of common goods, previously regarded as non-renewable resources in constant process of degradation. Focused on local communities and small groups that collaboratively organized for self-management, the work showed that an institutional composition of autonomous arrangements for the management of resources and work on a local scale was possible. The author, considered a neo-institutionalist, pointed to modes of governance in which community practices could gain centrality within the institutional apparatus. In this sense, it did not seek to replace the institutional mechanism, but to expand it through forms of self-management and self-organization.The most recent work by Dardot and Laval (2017) on the common seeks to theorize about the concept, in order to replace it in contemporary times as an instrument to fight against neoliberal reasoning. The etymology of the term in Greek (koinón) and Latin (munus) always implied a certain reciprocity, meaning both obligation and activity. Regarding the origins of the question, in the rise of the Greek city, man gained a kind of second life, belonging to two different spheres of existence: private life, or family life, and life in common, or politics. Later, however, Roman political doctrine nationalized the common, the right to res publica or to the “public thing”, understood as controlled by the State in a restricted way. Thus, the institution of private property comes from Roman law, the dominium, which allows total power and exclusive enjoyment over a thing. The idea of ownership excluded things from common use and began to negate the activity of cooperation.Still regarding the trajectory of the concept, according to the authors, between the 12th and 15th centuries, the Church tried to establish its own vision of the common as something universal and divine. Man was supposed to give up any property or possession, adopting a way of life dedicated to the "common" or "public thing" in the service of the community and of God. However, in the 17th century, the term found ambiguity in philosophical language, with a connotation far from the divine. It acquired a sense of vulgar, ordinary, of the people. That which is found everywhere and not owned by anyone. Over time, the Church aligned itself with the feudal state, but also maintained a current that is identified today with a communist vision, supporting the struggle of social movements.In the history of communist ideology, the term “common” has had three distinct meanings. First, the common was something shared that should never acquire unitary or shared value. Second, as defended by Marx, the common was the association of producers or free men. The existing form of ownership was associated with collective work. And the third was state communism, ownership by the State, seen as a step toward reaching a common without private property. From the 1980s on, the experiences of communism attested that the common accomplished by the State meant the destruction of the common by the State, which proved to be bureaucratic, authoritarian and corrupt. The historical experiences of attempts to implement socialism did not dissociate bureaucratic management from the State's economy, but rather accentuated its statist tendency.Those authors Dardot and Laval (2017) also contribute with reflections on the current struggle for the common. The challenge would be to build a new type of city based on the commitment of all citizens and on matters of common interest. It does not always depend on “rescuing” assets owned by the State or private property, but rather removing them from bureaucratic management and placing them under popular management. This is about community political power. With the neoliberal shift from the 1980s onward and the increasing privatization of state property and services, the concept seems to gain a new emphasis. After all, reference to the term “public” often means something that is publicly owned, that is, owned by the State, something at risk of changing ownership, of being privatized or restricted.Hardt and Negri's (2016) analysis of the common s is focused on building a revolutionary horizon. According to the authors, after 1970, capitalist production ceased to be based on material production and shifted its focus to social relations and forms of life: “a predatory operation that works through expropriation, transforming both public and common wealth into private property” (Hardt & Negri, 2016, p.153). As such, capitalist accumulation is increasingly external to the industrial production process, and the class struggle loses its strength, as it used to be supported by the union movement.As a critical reflection about anti-capitalist social and political movements that have emerged in recent decades, those authors argue that resistance is only possible based on the struggle for the common, against the privatization of all aspects of social life. It would be a collective escape from the relationship with capital. For the authors, the fight must be constant, since collective production is captured by capitalism and sold as a product: the commons constructed collectively today gains market value tomorrow.According to Harvey (2012, 2014), citizens must exercise their collective right to shape the city through greater regulation and democratic controls over the surplus capital used in urbanization. He defends a model of territorial co-production. Contrary to the acknowledgement that cities become commodities, the author points to a transformative agenda present in the citizen's collectivity: collective action.Nevertheless, Harvey presents some contradictions in the logic of the commons. A group of commoners must constantly renegotiate their identity and rearticulate the interests of the collective, since over time individuals develop desires in different directions. However, regarding the desired horizontality of management: making decisions in a purely horizontal way can often be a time-consuming and ineffective strategy (Harvey, 2014, p. 138).Another ambiguity appears in the use of the term “enclosure”; Harvey illustrates how the question can be used both positively and negatively within the capitalist system. Enclosure was a term adopted for the dispossession of communal productive land in England during the 18th and 19th centuries. During this period, common use lands were enclosed, and their use was restricted. Since then, the term enclosure has been used for the dispossession of the commons, that is, the appropriation by the private of what was previously in the public domain. For the author, the contradiction in the term appears when the enclosure is used in defense of everything that has not yet been submitted to capital. For example, by restricting a forest in order to protect it, one can, as a consequence, limit traditional and sustainable, productive but non-offensive uses by a given local community.Bollier (2016) stresses that the issue is not new. Currently, the discussion begins with understanding the limitations of the market economy, however, many traditional communities and indigenous peoples achieve an intimate familiarity with common goods. It is a way of life built over hundreds or even thousands of years. Regarding practices involving the enclosure of knowledge and culture, the author exposes antagonisms of legal aspects and instruments such as copyright and trademark. In scientific production, it denounces serious ethical conflicts of commoditization of the university through financing and partnerships with large companies, which often place constraints in the direction of research and publications on the results.The discussion of urban commons poses a series of questions and challenges to be explored, ranging from thinking about possible articulations between the legal framework and concrete experiences, seeking to consolidate the achievements of collective action, the legal and financing innovations that subsidize the allowance of the city to its citizens; to the challenges intrinsic to the commons, such as co-management and the process of constituting the community, which does not pre-exist, but is established during the experience.The struggle by means of the defense of common resources, managed collectively, is seen here as a form of collective construction by proposing community political power – or a collective political subject, based on local articulation and characterizing a political principle, not to be assigned, but to be instituted. This special edition of Revista GeAS rounds up articles that contribute to the issue of urban commons from various perspectives, including descriptive and conceptual approaches that propose other ways of existing in this becoming-world, the transformative power of the commons, the fissures and possibilities that it promotes, as well as its territorialized implications as a utopian horizon. The articles allow us to explore diverse aspects of this reflection.
publishDate 2021
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2021-04-22
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dc.identifier.uri.fl_str_mv https://periodicos.uninove.br/geas/article/view/19831
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dc.relation.none.fl_str_mv https://periodicos.uninove.br/geas/article/view/19831/8863
https://periodicos.uninove.br/geas/article/view/19831/8864
dc.rights.driver.fl_str_mv Copyright (c) 2021 Revista de Gestão Ambiental e Sustentabilidade
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
rights_invalid_str_mv Copyright (c) 2021 Revista de Gestão Ambiental e Sustentabilidade
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0
eu_rights_str_mv openAccess
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dc.publisher.none.fl_str_mv Universidade Nove de Julho - UNINOVE
publisher.none.fl_str_mv Universidade Nove de Julho - UNINOVE
dc.source.none.fl_str_mv Revista de Gestão Ambiental e Sustentabilidade; v. 10 n. 1 (2021): Fluxo contínuo; e19831
2316-9834
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repository.name.fl_str_mv Revista de Gestão Ambiental e Sustentabilidade - GeAS - Universidade Nove de Julho (UNINOVE)
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