Reflecting on the Recent History of the Commons
It’s clear that commoners will not only have to make history themselves, outside of ordinary channels, but to write and preserve that history as well. My colleagues Silke Helfrich and Michel Bauwens are off to a great start. Independently, they’ve prepared two useful syntheses of some of the more significant recent developments in the commons and P2P worlds.
Silke prepared a timeline that identifies landmarks in the commons movement from the past several years. The piece just appeared in the Winter 2014 issue of STIR magazine (about which I will have more to say below). The timeline is on Silke’s blog as well. Among the highlights: 
The rise of Remix the Commons (2010 – present), an evolving multimedia project about the key ideas and practices of the commons.
The Atmospheric Trust Litigation (2011 – present), which is filing lawsuits under the public trust doctrine to force state governments and the U.S. Government to protect the atmosphere as common property.
The world’s first Open Knowledge Festival in Finland, a week’s events in September 2012, in Helsinki, Finland. (The next Open Knowledge Festival will be in Berlin in July 2014.)
The Constitutional Assembly of the Commons held with 700 participants at the occupied Teatro Valley, a revered opera house in Rome, in April 2013.
The timeline also has some great illustrations by Hey Monkey Riot.
Meanwhile, Michel Bauwens posted the “Most Important P2P-Related Projects and Trends in 2013.” He cautions that “most important” “does not mean any blanket endorsement, nor ‘best.’ It just means that it is an important project.”
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The idea is that Internet users could use the TLDs to access various aspects of city life by using them in creative ways. Instead of having to rely on Google to search for museums in New York (which would yield thousands of not-very-well-organized listings), you could use museums.nyc and find everything laid out more intelligently. Or if you were new to Brooklyn Heights, you could go to brooklynheights.nyc and find all sorts of civic, community and commercial website listings for that neighborhood – the library, recycling resources, parking rules, links to relevant city officials. And yes, the businesses. The possibilities are endless -- and potentially enlivening for a city.
The report consists of abbreviated versions of all ten keynote talks; brief summaries of the stream discussions; short overviews of each of the side events (with contact information for the hosts); a guide to the wiki resources on commons and economics; and an account of the Francophone network of commoners. Videos of the keynote talks have been posted 
Now we are the midst of a veritable explosion of commons mapping projects. In October alone, there have been two loud thunderclaps of activity along these lines -- the 
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