Legal Innovations in Beating the Bounds: Part II of Law for the Commons

Below, a continuation of yesterday's post from the strategy memo, "Reinventing Law for the Commons," Part II of the four-part piece.

II.  Legal Innovations in Beating the Bounds:  Nine Promising Fields of Action 

Part II surveys the enormous amount of legal innovation going on in various commons-related fields of action.  The point of this section is to identify specific initiatives that are trying to transform the legal paradigm or carve out new “protected zones” of enforceable rights within existing legal frameworks.  I have identified nine major “clusters” of interesting experimentation and ferment:

1.  Indigenous Commons   

2.  Subsistence Commons in the Global South       

3.  Digital Commons       

4.  Stakeholder Trusts

5.  Co-operative Law 

6.  Urban Commons  

7.  Localism            

8.  New Organizational Forms     

9.  Re-imagining State Policy to Empower Commons   

Today's post focuses on the first four "clusters"; tomorrow's deals with #5 through #9.  And the final day will deal with Part III:  The Strategic Value of Developing Law for the Commons, and Part IV:  Next Steps.

The list of clusters and examples in Part II is not comprehensive.  It is merely a first attempt to assemble the fragments of commons-based legal innovation into a new mosaic that makes key, unifying themes more visible.  (I invite readers of this memo to inform me of any worthy additions by contacting me at david/at/bollier.org.)  Some examples may belong in two or more clusters, which I’ve tried to indicate with cross-references.  In Part III, I will reflect on the political and philosophical implications of the examples of Part II, followed by a discussion in Part IV of practical steps that might be taken to consolidate and extend Law for the Commons as a coherent body of legal activism.

read more

Upcoming Florida Council for the Social Studies Conference

It’s that time of year again! The Florida Council for the Social Studies Annual Conference is approaching, and now is the time to register for the event held from Oct 2-4 here in Orlando. As always, there will no doubt be sessions dedicated to areas across the social studies curriculum.

FCSSTo register for the conference, visit the online registration link and be prepared to enjoy yourself and meet with other social studies educators from across the state! And those of you in higher education, don’t forget that FCSS now has a branch of CUFA!!!


Reinventing Law for the Commons, Part I

One of the most devastating and recurring problems that virtually every commons faces is market enclosure – the privatization and marketization of shared resources by businesses, investors and speculators, often in collusion with government. What's really remarkable is that legislatures and courts so often declare that enclosures are legal because they supposedly contribute to economic growth, progress and freedom, etc.

All of this got me to thinking:  What would it look like if commoners could invent their own types of law, consistent with state law, to reliably protect their commons?  What if there were a more rigorous Law for the Commons?

There are in fact many examples from history.  The most notable ones may be the centuries-old public trust doctrine for water and other natural resources, and the Charter of the Forest, the forgotten part of Magna Carta that guarantees commoners’ rights. 

In our time, the General Public License for software and the Creative Commons licenses for content are masterstrokes of legal ingenuity that protect shared wealth.  Commoners can be confident that no one can legally appropriate their pooled resources, whether they are code, writing, images or music.

As I looked into this topic further, I discovered that there is in fact a wealth of legal innovation now underway in many sectors of the commons world.  There are clever legal hacks to protect indigenous peoples’ agroecological knowledge and traditions.  There are new variations on co-operative law and new legal initiatives to protect local communities’ self-determination.  There are stakeholder trusts and new organizational forms for commoning.

With support from the Heinrich Boell Foundation, I researched and wrote a lengthy four-part strategy memorandum outlining more than sixty examples of legal innovation for the commons.  The memo also includes a rationale for launching a new field of inquiry and activism, Law for the Commons.

read more

Public Conversations Project Founder: “Invest in NCDD”

Please take a minute to read this wonderful letter from Laura Chasin – founder of one of our long-standing members, the Public Conversations Project – endorsing the value of an NCDD membership. As we’ve recently mentioned, NCDD is in the midst of an important membership drive. If you are a non-dues member of NCDD, if your dues have lapsed, or if you’re not a member at all, we hope this letter encourages you to support our work!
We encourage you to look yourself up in the NCDD member directory at to find out your membership and dues status and join or renew today!


PCP Founder and D&D Leader Laura Chasin

Hello NCDD Community,

I am an extremely grateful to NCDD for its having been central to my professional life and critical to the work of numerous esteemed colleagues.

As the founder of the Public Conversation Project, I’ve derived ever-increasing benefits from my involvement with NCDD since it began. Sandy Heierbacher’s high-energy, deft, walk-the-talk leadership has fostered unusual loyalty and exceptional growth. NCDD conferences are highly relevant and stimulating; the resources and the exchanges accessible through its website are amazing in size and scope, and the diverse colleagues I meet through NCDD venues keep putting my work in valuable contemporary perspective.

In addition, NCDD has made Public Conversations’ work more visible across the US and abroad. My colleagues and I are particularly excited that NCDD will likely soon be housed with us here in Boston.

Speaking as a citizen, I experience NCDD as a nodal point in a growing, largely under-the-radar, multi-silo network of antidotes to the polarization and cynicism that haunt and hobble US politics and civil society. Knowing that I am doing my bit to help this vital coalition reach its full potential helps me to remain hopeful on days that the headlines would otherwise tempt me to despair.

I hope you’ll join with me in investing in NCDD’s future by becoming a dues-paying member today

In grateful solidarity,

Laura Chasin