WHAT'S ON

Events open to the public from the University of Cambridge

Submit events
 

Other events

Institute of Continuing Education: Undergraduate Virtual Open Day

Looking to pursue your love of learning, take the next step in your career or take your first steps along a new career path? Join us for our upcoming Undergraduate Virtual Open Day on 21st May, where we’ll delve into the world of undergraduate study at the Institute of Continuing Education

The Commons is Dead. Long Live the Commons!

Fri 12 June 2020 - Sat 13 June 2020

Online

Is the idea of the commons still relevant in an age of digital transformation and a global pandemic? Recent debates around the future of the commons have focused on the tensions between digital and physical realms, global and local forces, the shrinking of public space, the growth of surveillance, and a post-truth political culture within online filter bubbles. Now, the coronavirus pandemic has witnessed social distancing, the disintegration of physical spaces, societal unrest, mounting inequalities, and the virtual mediation of our civic and social lives - making the idea of the commons more important than ever. If Covid-19 is exposing power imbalances and the instability of our modern economic, political, and environmental systems, it is also providing impetus to new forms of solidarity networks and novel communication tools, together with a surge in mutual aid and community support and a new prominence to debates around universal access to public goods such as healthcare.

Broadly, the modern perception of the commons is the space where shared knowledge and experiences reside for the civic “good” or collective endeavour. By commons we refer not only to the natural environment and its resources, but also to shared social creations (such as public spaces), products of social interaction (like information, culture, knowledges, and affects), new technologies and cyberspace. Importantly, we also attempt to envisage commoning as an ongoing collective practice and ethos that shapes not only what is to be produced, but also the subjects and means involved in that process.

Under these unprecedented conditions we are required to ask whether the commons, as we traditionally think of it, is suffering a tragic decline, or whether it is being reimagined in new ways and new spaces. Is our physical isolation making us realise the fundamental importance of the commons? Could this new reality become the basis for new practices of commoning, from the socialisation of goods, healthcare, and digital content, to radical forms of reciprocity, collective care, and community solidarity?

The conference will serve as an open archive, documenting discussions, exchanges, and interventions in order to produce a publication that will arise out of these “commons ateliers”. We invite speakers and participants who are interested in re-imagining the commons today to join us in this collective endeavour.

Cost: FREE

Enquiries and booking

Booking is recommended for this event.

Enquiries: CRASSH Website Email: conferences@crassh.cam.ac.uk

Timing

All times

Fri 12 June 2020 2:00PM - 4:00PM
5:00PM - 7:00PM
Sat 13 June 2020 1:00PM - 3:00PM

Venue

Registration for the panels: http://www.crassh.cam.ac.uk/events/28579
Event will be live streamed: https://www.youtube.com/user/crasshpublicity
Address: Online
Online
Cambridge
Cambridgeshire
Online