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  1. He is controversial about some topics. In general though, he has a theme about abundance and self-reliance and peer networks in some of his books, like "Voyage from Yesteryear". That specific book has a lot of peer-to-peer themes. He later said maybe he went too far with it, but in any case, it is a picture of our current society in collission ...

  2. Michel Bauwens launched the observatory, curation efforts, and p2p analysis as a key lever for social change, which was at the origin of the launch of the P2P Foundation as a formal organization, with the help of James Burke. "Michel Bauwens is the founder of the Foundation for Peer-to-Peer Alternatives and works in collaboration with a global ...

  3. James Gien Wong, Cape Town, South Africa Rok Kranjc, Llubjana, Slovenia In Memoriam: Jean Lievens, active translator of P2P Foundation material in dutch and co-author of first Belgian-Flemish book on P2P. Kris Roose, Ghent, Belgium (integrative ...

  4. Inspired by the libertarian socialist G.D.H. Cole, James mentions Guild Socialism as an interesting approach for thinking about alternatives to the digital economy. Opposed to the strong centralized state approach to socialism, Cole’s theory prioritizes the creation of bottom-up democracies through local councils and worker guilds to create truly self-governing communities that embrace ...

  5. In December, 2009, she joined James Quilligan to develop a commons model as an alternative to development to be introduced to large numbers of people and to all governments via the United Nations. The United Nations was chosen since it is the most universal world organization where some 12000 people’s organizations, 192 governments and some 4011 corporations meet.

  6. I am a Full Professor and a core faculty member in James Madison University's Combined-Integrated Clinical and School Psychology Doctoral Program. I arrived at JMU in 2003, and directed the C-I doctoral program from 2005 to 2017. It has been a unique as ...

  7. After abandoning that term and trying a few others, including “non-availability” and “non-engineerability,” Rosa and his excellent translator James Wagner settled on “uncontrollability.” The book is then about “modernity’s incessant desire to make the world engineerable, predictable, available, accessible, disposable (i.e. verfügbar) in all its aspects.”

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