Environmental resource European land use Originally in
medieval England the common was an integral part of the
manor, and was thus legally part of the
estate in land owned by the
lord of the manor, but over which certain classes of manorial tenants and others held certain rights. By extension, the term "commons" has come to be applied to other resources which a community has rights or access to. The older texts use the word "common" to denote any such right, but more modern usage is to refer to particular rights of common, and to reserve the name "common" for the land over which the rights are exercised. A person who has a right in, or over, common land jointly with another or others is called a
commoner. In middle Europe, commons were kept for relatively
small-scale agriculture, especially in southern Germany, Austria, and the alpine countries, and some of these still exist. However, the UK and the former dominions have till today a large amount of
Crown land which often is used for community or conservation purposes.
Global commons Cultural and intellectual commons Today, the commons are also understood within a
cultural sphere. These commons include literature, music, arts, design, film, video, television, radio, information, software and sites of heritage.
Wikipedia is an example of the production and maintenance of
common goods by a contributor community in the form of encyclopedic knowledge that can be freely accessed by anyone without a central authority.
Tragedy of the commons in the Wiki-Commons is avoided by community control by individual authors within the Wikipedia community. The information commons may help protect users of commons. Companies that pollute the environment release information about what they are doing. The Corporate Toxics Information Project and information like the Toxic 100, a list of the top 100 polluters, helps people know what these corporations are doing to the environment.
Digital commons Mayo Fuster Morell proposed a definition of digital commons as "information and knowledge resources that are collectively created and owned or shared between or among a community and that tend to be non-exclusive, that is, be (generally freely) available to third parties. Thus, they are oriented to favor use and reuse, rather than to exchange as a commodity. Additionally, the community of people building them can intervene in the governing of their interaction processes and of their shared resources." Examples of digital commons are
Wikipedia,
free software and
open-source hardware projects. Following the narrative of post-growth, the digital commons can present a model of progress that guide commoners to build counter-power in the economic and political field. Being able to digitally share knowledge and resources through internet platforms is a new capacity that challenges the traditional hierarchical structures of production, allowing for a higher collective benefit and a sustainable management of resources. Non-material resources are digitally reproducible and therefore can be shared at a low cost, contrary to physical resources which are quite limited. In accordance with the "design global, manufacture local" approach digital commons may link the traditional commons theory with existing physical infrastructures. It further connects with the degrowth communities since transformations in use-value creation by employing new technologies, decoupling society from GDP growth and lower
carbon dioxide emissions, are envisioned. Accordingly, through the cooperation of diverse stakeholders and the equitable distribution of means of production, technological development becomes more accessible and bottom-up projects are fostered in communities. in Athens as urban commons in Cairo as urban commons Urban commons situates citizens as key players rather than public authorities, private markets and technologies. David Harvey (2012) defines the distinction between public spaces and urban commons. He highlights that the former is not to be equated automatically with urban commons. Public spaces and goods in the city make a commons when part of the citizens take political action.
Syntagma Square in Athens,
Tahrir Square in Cairo,
Maidan Nezalezhnosti in Kyiv, and the
Plaza de Catalunya in Barcelona were public spaces that transformed to an urban commons as people protested there to support their political statements. Streets are public spaces that have often become an urban commons by social action and revolutionary protests. Urban commons are operating in the cities in a complementary way with the state and the market. Some examples are
community gardening, urban farms on the rooftops and cultural spaces. Participatory studies of commons and infrastructures under the conditions of the
2008 financial crisis have emerged. == Society and culture ==