New Clear Vision


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How to Spark a Commons Revolution

May 07, 2011 By: NCVeditor Category: Community, Culture, Ecology, Family, Jay Walljasper

What You Can Do to Make a Better World

by Jay Walljasper

E.F. Schumacher (author of Small is Beautiful) gave us some good advice about how to restore the commons when he said, “Perhaps we cannot raise the wind. But each of us can put up the sail, so that when the wind comes we can catch it.” Even in these tough times, the breeze of change is beginning to blow.

The following is a handy list of ways you can raise the sail in your own community and life, reprinted from the new book published by On the Commons, All That We Share: A Field Guide to the Commons. These simple suggestions are offered to encourage you to find more of your own ideas, and to implement them in your lives and communities.

Personal Life

1. Challenge the prevailing myth that all problems have private, individualized solutions.

2. Notice how many of life’s pleasures exist outside the marketplace— gardening, fishing, conversing, playing music, playing ball, making love, enjoying nature and more.

3. Take time to enjoy what the commons offers. (As the radical Brazilian educator Paulo Freire once declared, “We are bigger than our schedules.”)

4. Introduce the children in your life to the commons. Let them see you enjoying it, and working with others to sustain it.

5. Keep in mind that security and satisfaction are more easily acquired from friends than money.

6. Become a mentor — officially or informally — to people of all ages around you. (And be prepared to learn as much as you teach.)

7. Think about living cooperatively with housemates.

8. Don’t be afraid to ask for help.

9. Have some fun. The best reason for restoring the commons is that it enriches our lives.

Community Life

10. Offer a smile or greeting to people you pass. The commons begins with connecting — even in brief, spontaneous ways.

11. Walk, bike, or take transit whenever you can. It’s good for the environment, but also for you. You meet very few people behind the wheel of your car.

12. Treat commons spaces as if you own them (which, actually, you do). Keep an eye on the place. Tidy things up. Report problems or repair things yourself. Initiate improvement campaigns.

13. Pull together a potluck. Throw a block party. Form a community choir, slow food club, Friday night poker game, May Day festival, or any other excuse for socializing.

14. Get out of the house and spend some time on the stoop, the front yard, the street — anywhere you can be a part of the river of life that flows past you.

15. Create or designate a “town square” for your neighborhood where folks naturally want to gather — a park, playground, vacant lot, community center, coffee shop or even a street corner.

16. Lobby for more public benches, water fountains, plazas, parks, sidewalks, bike trails, playgrounds, and other crucial commons infrastructure.

17.Conduct an inventory of local commons. Publicize your findings, and offer suggestions for celebrating and improving these community assets.

18. Organize your neighbors to prevent crime and to defuse the fear of crime, which often dampens a community’s spirits even more than crime itself.

19. Remember streets belong to people, not just automobiles. Drive cautiously and push for traffic calming and other improvements that remind motorists they are not kings of the road.

Money & the Economy

20. Buy from local, independent businesses whenever possible. (For more information see American Independent Business Alliance and the Business Alliance for Local Living Economies: www.livingeconomies.org.)

21. Before buying something at a chain store or online from a distant vendor, see if you can find it or order it from a local merchant. That way, some of your money stays in the community.

22. Investigate how many things you now pay for could be acquired in more cooperative ways — checking out DVDs at the library, quitting the health club and forming a morning jogging club, etc.

23. Form a neighborhood exchange to share everything from lawn mowers to childcare to vehicles.

24. Barter. Trade your skill in baking pies with someone who will fix your computer.

25. Look into creating a Time Dollars system or locally-based currency.

26. Organize a Common Security Club. You are not on your own when it comes to economic woes.

27. Watch where your money goes. How do the stores, companies and financial institutions you use harm or help the commons?

28. Purchase fair trade, organic and locally made goods from small producers as much as you can.

Social Change

29. Join campaigns opposing cutbacks in public assets like transit, schools, libraries, parks, social services, police and fire protection, arts programs and more.

30. Support activists around the globe working for debt relief, environmental protection, human rights, worker rights, sustainable development, and indigenous people.

31. Take every opportunity to talk with elected officials, nonprofit organizations, labor unions, professional societies, and business leaders about the importance of protecting the commons.

32. Protest the private patenting of products created with research paid for by taxpayers. Demand that publicly-funded research data be available to everyone on the Internet.

33. Write letters to the editor about the commons, post on local websites, call into talk radio, tell your friends.

34. Learn from everywhere. What can Copenhagen teach us about bicycles? India about wellness? Africa about community solidarity? Indigenous nations about the commons itself? What bright ideas could be borrowed from a nearby neighborhood or town?

Environment

35. Pick up litter that is not yours.

36. Avoid bottled water whenever you can. Tap water is generally safer. If you still have concerns about the local water supply — get a filter and pressure local officials to clean it up.

37. Become a guerrilla gardener, planting flowers and vegetables on neglected land in your neighborhood.

38. Organize a community garden or local farmer’s market.

39. Roll up your sleeves to restore a creek, wetland, woods, grasslands, or beautify a vacant lot.

40. Remember that everything that goes down your drain, on your lawn, in your garbage, or into your storm sewer eventually winds up in our water or air.

41. Seek new ways to use less energy and create less waste at home and work.

42. Form a study group to explore what can be done to promote sustainability in your community.

43. Purchase goods — from beer to clothing to hardware — produced close to home whenever possible. Shipping, trucking and flying goods long distances stresses the environment.

Information & Culture

44. Patronize and support your public library.

45. Demand that that schoolchildren should not become a captive audience for marketing campaigns.

46.Contribute your knowledge to on-line commons such as wikipedia, open education projects and open access journals. Form your own online community to explore commons issues.

47. Use Creative Commons licenses for your own writing, music, videos and other creative pursuits.

48. Conceive a public art project for your community.

Commons Consciousness

49. Think yourself as a commoner and share your enthusiasm. Raise the subject in conversation, art, professional circles, and organizations with which you are involved.

50. Launch a commons discussion group or bookclub with your neighbors and colleagues, or at your church, synagogue, or temple.

51. Spread some hope around. Explain how commons-based solutions can remedy today’s pressing problems.

Jay Walljasper is co-editor of OnTheCommons.org, and is the author of the new book All That We Share: A Field Guide to the Commons (The New Press, 2010). He is a Contributing Editor at National Geographic Traveler, a Senior Fellow of the Project for Public Spaces, and a Contributing Author for New Clear Vision.

0 Comments to “How to Spark a Commons Revolution”


  1. Jay, a list of good ideas for community action and community education projects.
    My comment on ‘End of Empire education’ reminds us that citizens as neighbours on the commons can provide the essential educational experiences for the young and old.
    Learning on the street corner, in the street, and in the garden, and community spaces involve us all in the fifty one actions and more that Jay presents.
    Of course, these approaches and perspectives are based on the assumption that we are settled and involved in living in a neighbourhood. We do not just sleep where we live. We are not just concerned to make our personal space separate from everyone else.

    have a look at http://www.kelvynrichards.com ‘A Discourse: Social Ecology’

    1

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