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The Handbook of Peer Production. Группа авторов
Читать онлайн.Название The Handbook of Peer Production
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9781119537090
Автор произведения Группа авторов
Жанр Кинематограф, театр
Издательство John Wiley & Sons Limited
In their examination of “empire,” Hardt and Negri (2000, 2004, 2009) argue that the sovereignty of the nation state has been replaced by a decentralized and ever‐expanding regime of power that demolishes barriers between what is inside and what is outside of the empire. What emerges from this system of power is an interconnected network, which is capable of managing “hybrid identities, flexible hierarchies, and plural exchanges through modulating networks of command” (Hardt & Negri, 2000, pp. xii–xiii). But whereas these networks enable the nearly seamless flow of global capital, command of commodity supply chains, and increased control and discipline of labor, they also simultaneously give rise to contradictory forces that challenge the prevailing order. For example, the increasing interconnection of peoples, places, cultures, creativity, and so on, makes possible the creation of “the common.” By “the common,” Hardt and Negri refer not only to “the common wealth of the material world – the air, the water, the fruits of the soil, and all nature’s bounty” but also to “those results of social production that are necessary for social interaction and further production, such as knowledges, languages, codes, information, affects, and so on” (Hardt & Negri, 2009, p. vii). The production of the common, particularly as it pertains to peer production online, manifests in the sharing of free and open source software projects, open access book projects, “wikis” dedicated to curating knowledge and information, cultural products in the public domain, and many other projects aimed at creating and preserving shared resources that may be accessed by others.
However, there is more at play in the commons than simply a collectively governed resource. The commons can also be viewed as a “process of becoming,” which moves beyond the commons as an identity and orients human activity toward an ethical horizon to which we can aspire (Dyer‐Witheford, 2006; Hardt & Negri, 2009; Ryan, 2013; Gutiérrez‐Aguilar, 2014; Singh, 2017). For this reason, Linebaugh (2008) prefers the active verb “commoning,” which he explains is “embedded in a labor process”; it is collective, and it is “independent of the temporality of the law and the state” (p. 45). Moreover, this framing helps account for the “dual nature” of the commons, which encompasses both the objects of the commons (i.e., a collectively governed resource to which all members of the community claim some association) as well as a subjectivity in which the values of mutual aid, care, trust, and conviviality can be produced and reproduced over time (DeAngelis, 2017). The focus on reproduction is particularly important here, as it corresponds to the critiques from feminist political economy that drew attention to forms of unwaged labor and social reproduction, both of which are instrumental to capitalism but also sites of struggle (Dalla Costa & James, 1975; Jarrett, 2016; Federici, 2012).
Furthermore, positioning the commons as a process of becoming adds critical weight to commoning practices by demonstrating how those activities are capable of bringing about a postcapitalist future. The term “postcapitalism” is generally used to describe a number of different proposals for developing a new economic system to replace capitalism. While there is no unified theory of what postcapitalism is or what it will look like, most thinkers writing about the subject generally agree that the contradictions within capitalism and the recurrent crises of capitalism are unsustainable in the long run. Therefore, they offer proposals for what a postcapitalist future will look like as well as different proposals for how such a system can be achieved. In a sense, these thinkers are revitalizing the tradition of utopian socialism, which offered visions of a future society that was comprised of freely associating individuals living in harmony with one another. Early utopian socialist thinkers, like Henri de Saint‐Simon and Charles Fourier influenced Karl Marx, and Marx’s work is often situated within a combination of three conceptual areas: political economy, German classical critical philosophy, and utopian socialism (Harvey, 2010). While Marx remains somewhat vague in his specific description of society after the abolition of capitalism, he carried on the tradition of utopian socialism in thinking that another world was possible. In Marx’s formulation, such a transition was only possible through the revolutionary struggle of the working class against capital.
More recent accounts of postcapitalism focus on the ways that social relations are beginning to transform in ways that are antithetical to capitalism. For example, one of the earliest uses of the term ‘postcapitalism’ comes from Peter Drucker’s (1994) book, Post‐Capitalist Society. Noting that the transformation toward more information‐ or knowledge‐based economies in the Global North, and particularly the United States, Drucker argued that such a shift fundamentally changes the social, economic, and political dynamics throughout society. As a management consultant and educator, Drucker’s analysis of postcapitalism was not about radically transforming or replacing the capitalist system but recognizing the shifts occurring from within capitalism and how business organizations could adapt their strategies to survive in this new form of capitalism.
Two other recent works have become influential for thinking about postcapitalism. One account comes from the journalist Paul Mason (2015), whose account of postcapitalism does not shy away from a critique of capitalism. Mason argues that the imbalances of power and the increasingly devastating crises at the heart of neoliberal capitalism are ultimately unsustainable. He argues that we need to move beyond capitalism so that it is replaced with an economic system that will be more beneficial and sustainable. To that end, Mason offers five principles for the transition to postcapitalism. The first principle is more of a condition for implementing any project for social change. We need to test all proposals at a small scale then model them many times over before implementing them on a broader scale. Second, ecological sustainability is a necessity for any project in designing the future. Third, the transition to postcapitalism is not simply about economics; it is about human beings, and we cannot privilege economic progress at the expense of social welfare. Fourth, problems must be attacked from all angles, which takes advantage of networked hierarchies. In short, the benefit of networks is that meaningful action can occur at many different levels and it does not need to be centralized. Finally, we should maximize the power of information by learning from the data being generated about social life. However, the apparatus for data collection would be collaborative and de‐centralized rather than under corporate control.
Another influential work about postcapitalism comes from Nick Srnicek and Alex Williams (2016) who provide a series of demands that are necessary for the transition to postcapitalism. First, the authors argue for a fully automated economy, which would free up human beings from the required routines of waged labor. More specifically, they argue for a progressive reduction in work so that necessary labor is reduced as much as possible. Not only would this eliminate some of the social hierarchies between different types of employment, but it would also free up more time for addressing social and community needs. Second, the authors argue for a reduction in the length of the work week with no reduction in pay. Third, the authors argue for a universal basic income that is sufficient for living, given without qualification, and acts as a supplement to the welfare state rather than a replacement. Finally, the authors argue for a diminishment of the work ethic, or the development of a counter‐hegemonic approach to work. Such an approach “would overturn existing ideas about the necessity and desirability of work, and the imposition of suffering as a basis for remuneration” (Srnicek & Williams, 2016, p. 125).
At the heart of these proposals is the