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Expanding the Frontiers of Commoning

Part of the 2023 series Schumacher Conversations: Envisioning the Next 50 Years


As the 50th anniversary of the book Small is Beautiful, 2023 is our opportunity to advance solutions to today’s social, economic, and environmental challenges that build on Schumacher’s original vision. To meet this calling, the Schumacher Center is convening a monthly series featuring New Economic thinkers, builders and activists from a range of fields. November’s theme is Expanding the Frontiers of Commoning.

The Conversation features three visionaries developing novel organizational forms and infrastructures to extend the enlivening, social dynamics of the commons:

– Kathryn Milun, University of Minnesota and the Solar Commons Project
– Dorn Cox, Co-Founder of Farm Hack, author of The Great Regeneration
– Sanda Niessen, Co-Founder of Fashion Act Now!
– David Bollier, Program Director, Reinventing the Commons at the Schumacher Center for New Economics (host)

Ever bigger machines, entailing ever bigger concentrations of economic power and exerting ever greater violence against the environment, do not represent progress: they are a denial of wisdom. Wisdom demands a new orientation of science and technology towards the organic, the gentle, the nonviolent, the elegant and beautiful.
— E.F. Schumacher, Small is Beautiful

From open source technologies for smallholder agriculture, to degrowth fashion initiatives disrupting conventional garment production, to local solar commons  managed as trusts for community benefit, these participants’ projects show how innovative organizational structures and design can empower people while respecting planetary limits, avoiding the harmful dynamics of global capital and corporate systems.

The event will be held virtually on Thursday the 16th at 2PM (EST). Registration is free.

Each speaker ins invited to reflect on the influence, if any, of Small Is Beautiful  on their socio-economic thinking and activism, opening up a broader conversion on the topic, followed by  audience Q&A.

Register here.

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Event Panelists

David Bollier

David Bollier is the Schumacher Center’s Reinventing the Commons Program Director. He is an author, activist, blogger and independent scholar with a primary focus on the commons as a new paradigm of economics, politics and culture.  He is a co-founder of the Commons Strategies Group, an advocacy/consulting project that assists the international commons movement.  Bollier’s … Continued

Kathryn Milun

Kathryn Milun is a community-engaged scholar, writer, and energy democracy activist whose work has long been rooted in how communities locally, sustainably, and equitably govern “commons” –shared gifts of nature (air, water, wildlife, food) and community.   As a legal anthropologist, Dr. Milun collaborates with community partners to prototype community trust ownership as a legal … Continued

Sandra Niessen

Sandra Niessen, PhD (Leiden University 1985), is a Canadian/Dutch cultural anthropologist, whose fieldwork has focused primarily on the clothing culture of the Batak people inhabiting the region around Lake Toba in North Sumatra, Indonesia. Her research on the handwoven textile repertory over a period of 45 years has resulted in numerous books, articles and films.  … Continued

Dorn Cox

Dorn Cox is the research director for the Wolfe’s Neck Center for Agriculture and the Environment in Freeport, Maine, and farms with his family on 250 acres in Lee, New Hampshire. He is a founder of the farmOS software platform and Farm Hack, and is active in the soil health movement. In 2018, he received the … Continued