Urban Commoning Under Adverse Conditions: Lessons From a Failed Transdisciplinary Project

While the commons and commoning are generally associated with community-based ecosystems at the localised scale of the neighbourhood, ambitious reinterpretations explore possibilities for scaling up commoning as a collaborative and sustainable form of urban governance engaging multiple stakeholders...

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Main Authors: Julia Zielke, Paul Hepburn, Matthew Thompson, Alan Southern
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-12-01
Series:Frontiers in Sustainable Cities
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frsc.2021.727331/full
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author Julia Zielke
Paul Hepburn
Matthew Thompson
Alan Southern
author_facet Julia Zielke
Paul Hepburn
Matthew Thompson
Alan Southern
author_sort Julia Zielke
collection DOAJ
description While the commons and commoning are generally associated with community-based ecosystems at the localised scale of the neighbourhood, ambitious reinterpretations explore possibilities for scaling up commoning as a collaborative and sustainable form of urban governance engaging multiple stakeholders through the quintuple helix. Inspired by the City as Commons approach first imagined and formulated in Bologna, Italy, this paper presents original findings from a transdisciplinary action research project for studying and cultivating commoning-as-governance in a politically disaffected and economically marginalised inner-city neighbourhood in Liverpool, England. It examines the social relations (re)constituting an urban ecosystem for commoning and asks how such initiatives for designing collaborative programmes for transforming urban environments through public-common partnerships might work in contexts in which the material and affective resources for commoning have been exhausted by post-democratic privatisation and neoliberal austerity. Drawing on theories of radical democracy and post-politics, the City as Commons approach is critically evaluated and argued to be insufficient to the challenging task of engendering commoning in the disintegrating urban neighbourhoods that would arguably benefit most from such activities. The paper tells the story of how this transdisciplinary project ultimately failed in its aims and, through engagement with recent interventions on the politics of failure in the neoliberal university, reflects on the implications for future action research on commoning.
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spelling doaj.art-49550075c6714169b5503e39f1d74eb62023-05-11T11:22:17ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Sustainable Cities2624-96342021-12-01310.3389/frsc.2021.727331727331Urban Commoning Under Adverse Conditions: Lessons From a Failed Transdisciplinary ProjectJulia Zielke0Paul Hepburn1Matthew Thompson2Alan Southern3Department of Epidemiology and International Public Health, School of Public Health, Bielefeld University, Bielefeld, GermanySchool of Health and Society, University of Salford, Manchester, United KingdomInstitute for Innovation and Public Purpose, University College London, London, United KingdomManagement School, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, United KingdomWhile the commons and commoning are generally associated with community-based ecosystems at the localised scale of the neighbourhood, ambitious reinterpretations explore possibilities for scaling up commoning as a collaborative and sustainable form of urban governance engaging multiple stakeholders through the quintuple helix. Inspired by the City as Commons approach first imagined and formulated in Bologna, Italy, this paper presents original findings from a transdisciplinary action research project for studying and cultivating commoning-as-governance in a politically disaffected and economically marginalised inner-city neighbourhood in Liverpool, England. It examines the social relations (re)constituting an urban ecosystem for commoning and asks how such initiatives for designing collaborative programmes for transforming urban environments through public-common partnerships might work in contexts in which the material and affective resources for commoning have been exhausted by post-democratic privatisation and neoliberal austerity. Drawing on theories of radical democracy and post-politics, the City as Commons approach is critically evaluated and argued to be insufficient to the challenging task of engendering commoning in the disintegrating urban neighbourhoods that would arguably benefit most from such activities. The paper tells the story of how this transdisciplinary project ultimately failed in its aims and, through engagement with recent interventions on the politics of failure in the neoliberal university, reflects on the implications for future action research on commoning.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frsc.2021.727331/fullcommonsurban governancecommunity economysocial innovationneoliberal austeritypost-politics
spellingShingle Julia Zielke
Paul Hepburn
Matthew Thompson
Alan Southern
Urban Commoning Under Adverse Conditions: Lessons From a Failed Transdisciplinary Project
Frontiers in Sustainable Cities
commons
urban governance
community economy
social innovation
neoliberal austerity
post-politics
title Urban Commoning Under Adverse Conditions: Lessons From a Failed Transdisciplinary Project
title_full Urban Commoning Under Adverse Conditions: Lessons From a Failed Transdisciplinary Project
title_fullStr Urban Commoning Under Adverse Conditions: Lessons From a Failed Transdisciplinary Project
title_full_unstemmed Urban Commoning Under Adverse Conditions: Lessons From a Failed Transdisciplinary Project
title_short Urban Commoning Under Adverse Conditions: Lessons From a Failed Transdisciplinary Project
title_sort urban commoning under adverse conditions lessons from a failed transdisciplinary project
topic commons
urban governance
community economy
social innovation
neoliberal austerity
post-politics
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frsc.2021.727331/full
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