Attribut:Paragraphe biographique
De Remix Biens Communs
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Sébastien Broca est sociologue, maître de conférences en sciences de l'information et de la communication à l'Université Paris 8 Vincennes Saint-Denis. Ses recherches portent sur le développement des communs numériques (logiciels libres, Creative Commons, etc.) dans une perspective cherchant à articuler certains apports de la théorie critique et une réflexion sur l’économie politique d’Internet.
Publication Utopie du logiciel libre, Le passager clandestin, 2013. +
I’m Laure Brossin-Pillot, living in France (Paris) after many months spent on the different banks of Mediterranean Sea during my PhD. As a librarian teacher in a "lycée" (high school) located in a northern suburb area of Paris (Saint-Denis), I try, as far as I can, to give a common dimension to my pedagogy. I’m currently involved in the « eco-responsible » program of our lycée (held by the region). I concretely contribute to the vegetable garden of our high school founded by the Biology team and try to build a network of school seed libraries. As a doctor in Greek Archaeology (Sorbonne-University), I’m now working on the Commons during Antiquity, through the prism of Ancient libraries and reading practices. +
Daphne Büllesbach is Berlin-based Director of Programmes at European Alternatives, a Europe-wide civil society organization devoted to exploring and developing the potential for transnational politics and culture. She was co-curator of last year’s Transeuropa Festival 'Beyond Fragments' that took place in Belgrade in October 2015, bringing together activists and artists debating issues such as the refugee situation, management of the commons or the seizure of institutions by new political forces. After years of gathering and connecting progressive voices around Europe, she is experienced in the difficulties of cross border political work and holds a particular interest for solutions to bridging the local to the transnational. Otherwise she has been involved in developing new online talk formats such as Talk Real (international) and talk im transit (German). +
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Yves Cabannes, urbaniste, a travaillé en Asie, Afrique, Pays Arabes et surtout en Amérique latine, au Brésil et Mexique, avec des organisations sociales des ONGs et des gouvernements locaux dans le domaine du développement local, du logement, de l’emploi, de la formation et du micro crédit. . Il a été directeur de programmes de recherche urbaine et professeur invité de plusieurs universités. De 1997 a 2004, il a coordonné, pour l’ Amérique Latine et la Caraïbe,à partir de Quito, le Programme de Gestion Urbaine ( UNDP/UN Habitat). Aprés deux années d’enseignement à l’Université d’Harvard (Graduate School of Design) et sous-directeur de son Centre de Recherche sur le Développement Urbain, il est depuis septembre 2006 Professeur et titulaire de la Chaire de la Panification du Développement à L’University College London, Unité de Planification du Développement.
Activement engagé dans la défense du droit à la ville et à l’habitation , il est membre de la direction de plusieurs organisations de la société civile. +
I would like to join this mailing list. I am a PhD student in University College Dublin looking at community involvement in biodiversity governance in Ireland and the UK, through the lens of the commons. I am also active in re - establishing the Transition Town network in Ireland. I would like to connect with 'commoners' around Europe, to learn and to participate in this movement. +
From Navarra Basque Country Spain. I'm part of the ecovillages mouvement since 35 years. Now in arterra bizimodu , a new ecovillage . Im part of the coordination team of Red Iberica de Ecoaldeas ( rie) ang Gen ( global ecovillage network)europe , and part also of Ecolise. We are looking for and living in common...developing a new culture . +
I am one of the co-organiser of the two years process that led to the creation of the Interg-group at the European Parliament on the commons. Of course I am in touch with many of them. I am part of the group facilitating the Commons Space at the WSF (next August in Montreal) I am a Brussels-based social and political activist, searcher and campaigner. The Commons are both part of my activism and my research. Together with other topic such as: right to water, right to land, women's right, migration. I have been part of the" mouvement altermondialiste" since 2001 and participated in the Occupy movement in US. I am part of several networks such as EWM, Transform!, STOP-TTIP, as an activist, and of the IASC (as a researcher). And I collaborate with many others. By education I am social scientist (PhD) and currently studying Human Rights Law. +
Né à Marseille en 1974, Julien Cantoni a occupé des fonctions de direction financière au sein de diverses structures privées et publiques. Impliqué dans les questions de l'entreprenariat social et solidaire, il a conduit notamment dans un organisme HLM un projet de labellisation RSE délivré au plan européen. Actuellement directeur financier adjoint d'une grande maison d'édition française, il s'est intéressé depuis quelques années à la question numérique tant au plan économique que politique ou culturel. Il est l'auteur d'un ouvrage paru aux éditions Inculte (juin 2014), "La société connectée", qui traite de l'impact économique, politique et individuel de la troisième révolution industrielle insufflée par l'émergence du numérique. Il plaide pour réconcilier l'économie digitale et l'économie tangible - qui pour l'heure s'affrontent brutalement - et plus largement pour que l'essor du numérique bénéficie tant aux consommateurs qu'aux citoyens. +
from Totnes in Devon, where I have lived for the last 6 years. I really look forward to being part of the Commons Assembly in Brussels, and to meeting you all. My particular interest is governance of the commons, and raising citizen responsibility for the commons in the bioregion where I live.
I partly work with Transition Network, running the livelihood-creation programme for young adults called One Year in Transition. See: http://www.oneyearintransition.org/ In April I took my students to Bristol where we made a shared enquiry into City as Commons. While I am in Brussels with you all I will be partly representing Transition Network, and partly my other work.
In my other work I have been helping communities map their assets and create a local Community Charter that asserts their responsibility to protect those assets against inappropriate or destructive development. In doing this we are addressing contemporary governance of the commons and asking questions such as “how do we move a vernacular law of the people into local law in the UK?”; "how can a community measure the well-being of its assets, what are the key performance indicators?”;
“what knowledge does a community need to manage a long-term sustainable ecology and economy?”. You can see the example of the Falkirk Charter (which was the first) here: http://www.faug.org.uk/campaign/community-charter
Now I am building a team in South Devon to set up a whole-systems change programme that moves this bio-region towards resilience. We are mindful that the water framework directive in the UK is successful in managing rivers from source to sea but is failing in community engagement and whole-systems change. Our new organisation will be the backbone of the network of actors in this place, using the language of the commons and connecting citizens to the land in many innovative and creative ways: stewards of the river, a water parliament, a watershed Charter etc. One outcome will be a bioregional learning centre for the UK.
Mauro Castro is a member of La Hidra Cooperativa and of Fundación de los Comunes. Economist and Doctor of Philosophy in Political Science, with a research history on the topic of the urban commons and other related lines (territorial segregation, urban movements, processes of participation and democratic innovation at the local level, etc.). He has participated in the Organization of scientific events and research projects as well as done some scientific publications, both Latin American and Spanish magazines. +
Teodor Celakoski is a cultural worker and activist from Zagreb. His work ranges from coordinating cultural programs, networking and cultural advocacy, to institutional innovation and political activism. Celakoski co-founded the Multimedia Institute and cultural center MaMa, an organisation and venue focused on digital culture, human rights and critical theory. He helped initiate Clubture, the network for exchange of independent cultural programs within Croatia. Further, he played a key role in initiating Kultura Nova, a public foundation for the development of non-profit independent contemporary culture and POGON - a hybrid cultural center established as an institutional public-civic partnership between independent cultural actors and the city of Zagreb. He is also a coordinator of the Right to the City Zagreb, founded to fight the economic overexploitation of public space in the city of Zagreb and Croatia. +
Maître de conférences en sciences de gestion et membre du LIRSA, CNAM Paris. Ses recherches portent sur la construction sociale de l’information financière, son interprétation - tant par la finance que par les salariés des entreprises et leurs représentants – et sur les conséquences sociales qui en découlent. +
Injecteur, depuis 1992, au sein d'activités humaines terrestres, de comportements individuels et collectifs, qui soient un peu plus alignés avec, la protection, l'entretien et la restauration, des biens communs, de la Biosphere, d'une paix mondiale durable, de pratiques économiques solidaires, circulaires, fonctionnelles et distributives, sans recourir, ni à l'utilisation des techniques manipulatoires sociologiques, ni à l'utilisation des savoirs en techniques de stratégies individuelles ou collectives. Utilisateur et contributeurs des Logiciels Libres. Contributeur à la création et à l'essort du nouveau champ d'activités qu'est le matériel Libre (Open Hardware). Porteur du projet Voosilla (fr-voosilla.ouvaton.org). Admirateur de la Nature depuis toujours, espérant que des fonds bienveillants sauront devenir propriétaires de parcelles de terres remarquables pour les protéger ad-vitam-eternam, les graver dans les Biens Communs, et créer des économies autour ce cette protection afin d'en faire profiter les habitants locaux: simples naturelles et évidentes contreparties. +
Didier Christin, coordinateur du pôle recherche-intervention à Sol et Civilisation (www.soletcivilisation.fr), docteur en sciences de l’environnement et en science politique. Mes missions visent à comprendre les dynamiques territoriales, leur rôle dans la prise en charge des réalités complexes et multi-acteurs ; en faciliter l’adaptation et la réactualisation face aux grands enjeux d’aujourd’hui avec des concepts, méthodes, procédures, outils et savoir-faire adaptés.
A ce titre, mieux connaitre, faire reconnaitre et améliorer la capacité des acteurs dans les territoires à « agir en commun » sont pour moi des enjeux clés. Concernant ma participation à l’atelier « Finance et biens communs », 2 choses. 1) Me tenir informé des débats qui existent sur ces thèmes, et des débatteurs qui les animent. 2) Comme je distingue l’action individuelle et l’action collective (« une organisation à l’aide de laquelle une nation se décharge sur quelques individus de ce qu’elle ne peut ou ne veut pas faire elle-même », B. Contant) de l’action en commun, il apparait que les deux grandes sources de financement des actions/institutions (pour caricaturer, pour l’intérêt individuel, le Marché ; pour l’intérêt général/collectif, l’Etat (impôts, redevances…) finalement ne permettent pas aux dispositifs « d’action en commun » dans les territoires de se développer… Je ne suis pas du tout un spécialiste de ce domaine, mais je suis donc intéressé à travailler/découvrir des dispositifs permettant réellement de financer et donc de faciliter l’action en commun (par (contre)exemple, les Agences de l’eau en France auraient pu représenter un exemple de tel dispositif, or elles ont fini par évoluer vers une organisation « collective » et non « de facilitation de l’action en commun » ; quand bien même l’eau est décrétée « patrimoine commun de la nation » dans la loi sur l’eau). +
I am a researcher at the Centre for Agroecology, Water and Resilience of Coventry University (UK). I am based in Brussels. I look forward to meeting you all at the Zinneke on the 15th (I won't be able to attend the following days). My interest in the commons is quite recent but growing.
I have done research on the creation of new human rights - right to land, biodiversity and seeds - by transnational peasant movements (such as La Via Campesina) and am now involved in negotiations at the UN on a new Declaration on the Rights of Peasants and other people working in rural areas. In that context, the issue of the "traditional" commons (land, other natural resources but also seeds) has come up quite strongly, and in particular the need to recognize and protect those spaces and associated collective management practices in international law. My personal interest is in documenting natural commons practices in the European context and in exploring the legal frameworks that we need to support and defend them.
I am particularly interested in the policy proposals around ecovillages, land in Galicia, natural commons and solidarity economy. +
I am part of Prinzessinnengärten (http://prinzessinnengarten.net/about/]- a social and ecological urban gardening project in Berlin and of the Neighborhood Academy [http://www.nachbarschaftsakademie.org/en/about/]- a self-organized open platform for urban and rural knowledge sharing, cultural practice and activism I am especially interested in question of collective land use and self organized forms of „collective learning" to promote and establish new forms of ownership +
Scriptwriter and director of socially engaged documentaries since 1995. He has directed films exhibited in festivals and televisions in more than 15 countries. Some of his remarkable works are Sobre ruedas (Keep on Rolling: The Dream of the Automobile); Bendito Simulacro (Blessed Simulacrum), or Zruska (Zruska). +
Benjamin Coriat est un économiste français. Licencié de philosophie, docteur et agrégé en sciences économiques, il est depuis 1989 professeur à l'université de Paris 13. Il est coprésident du collectif des Économistes Atterrés.
Il a co-dirigé l'ANR PROPICE (http://www.mshparisnord.fr/ANR-PROPICE/) +
I work as an independent moderator and facilitator for debat, (socratic) dialogue and conference, mainly in the Netherlands, Belgium and the Baltic States. (my wife is from Estonia). In 2014 I was initiator of the first Citizens Summit in my home town Amsterdam. (www.burgertop-amsterdam.nl). I am a board member of the Dutch Moderators Association and active in the Dutch Association of Journalists.
Some words about this Citizens Summit: On the 6th of June last year 250 Amsterdammers came together to work out plans for a better, more just and more inclusive city. It was a long struggle to get this Summit off the ground, mainly because the political culture in the city is very inward-focused. But with the help of over a hundred volunteers we succeeded and the participants worked out 60 concrete plans in one day, trough a deliberative proces at 35 round tables. (If you are interested, I wrote a paper on the Summit called 'Dismantling the Theatre of Democracy’ in Estonian publication Ehituskunst, you can download it here as pdf: http://www.bartcosijn.nl/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/Ehituskunst_2016_Bart-Cosijn.pdf)
In many places and cities, I experience a great willingness of ordinary citizens to invest personal time in their community. On the other hand, I am deeply worried that the willingness to participate in formal local (representative) democracies in Europe is very low. In Amsterdam the turnout in local elections is just over 50%, in some boroughs even less than 40%. New deliberative practices, online and offline, are emerging. But party-politics and elections-cycles are very dominant in our democratic systems. We need each other to redefine the democratic and public domain, to make it more open, more inclusive, more common and less politicized. +
My main work is supporting local communities governing natural commons (common governance of natural resources) in Spain (through "Iniciativa Comunales" www.icomunales.org) and at global level (through the ICCA Consortium www.iccaconsortium.org). My work focuses on enhancing the quality of the communities' governance, promote the environmental, social and economic values of their work, and providing tools and support to achieve their goals.
Based in Andalusia, Spain. Sergio is a Spanish biologist with a strong background on participatory and innovative approaches to the management and conservation of natural resources and biodiversity. Initially, he worked as field biologist for several companies and NGOs as the Sociedad Española de Ornitología (SEO/BirdLife) and as researcher for the Pyrenean Institute of Ecology (CSIC). As consultant he worked on wildlife management, conducting wildlife inventories for both the governmental and the private sector in Spain. More recently, one of his key interests is creating tools to enhance the participation and commitment of rural communities on biodiversity conservation initiatives, and enhance the role and recognition of the commons in Spain and Europe. He sees the commons not only as embodying environmental, cultural and democracy values, but also as having potential to contribute to solving many of the environmental, economic and social challenges of our time. Sergio is Regional Coordinator for Europe of the ICCA Consortium and one of the co-founders of Iniciativa Comunales, a network of local communities governing commons in Spain. He is a member of the IUCN Commission on Environmental, Economic and Social Policy and World Commission on Protected Areas and works as independent consultant for several NGOs and institutions’ programs, including the European Commission LIFE program. +