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  1. (GW 110–11) Yet evolutionists have had no real problem incorporating these back-and-forth societies into their typologies. Allen Johnson and Timothy Earle (1987: 31-38, drawing on Steward 1938) even used the Great Basin Shoshone of a century ago as a case study in their widely read book The Evolution of Human Societies.

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    Harvey Jones, and Ryland Lefoe: “Distributed Leadership for learning and teaching is a leadership approach in which collaborative working is undertaken between individuals who trust and respect each other’s contribution. It occurs as a result of an open culture within and across an institution. It is an approach in which reflective practice is an i...

    that the engagement of many people contributes to a more shared, collaborative approach to leadership.

    The example of the conductor-less Orpheus Orchestra, by Harvey Seifter: "In most orchestras, the conductor directly supervises each musician; the conductor not only decides what music will be played but how it will be played as well. There is little room for the opinions or suggestions of the musicians themselves; such input is rarely solicited and...

    Paul Hartzog

    “One of the great mysteries of large distributed systems– from communities and organizations to brains andecosystems – is how globally coherent activity canemerge in the absence of centralized authority orcontrol”. “We’re naturally predisposed to think in terms ofpacemakers, whether we’re talking about fungi, politicalsystems, or our own bodies…. For millennia we’ve builtelaborate pacemaker cells into our social organization,whether they come in the form of kings, dictators, orcity councilmem...

    Mark Roest

    "Leadership evolved in two or more major threads: small groups, especiallysmall communities and conscious companies, and large organizations,city-states, and nations. There have always been people who understood bothTheory X and Theory Y leadership philosophies, because they inherited themor discovered them on their own, before they were named. But in both cases, leadership was defined by the finite nature of theorganization or state, which often lived in hostility with at least some ofits ne...

  2. Module 1: The anthropology of peer to peer and the commons P2P as a relational dynamic: new social relations, then and now Commoning Against The Crisis. (Chapter 6) By Angelos Varvarousis and Giorgos Kallis. URL The commoning movement in Greece

  3. New governance arrangements might also raise the specter of climate and environmental colonialism (110), which requires a transformative approach in international relations marked by planetary justice and fair global cooperation. Any new governance ...

  4. At least $110 million is estimated to have already been spent on pilot projects by the centres since August 2018. And government directives propose each county centre enlist 10-13% of the local population as “volunteers” to carry out their mission — a figure suggesting at least 140 million such conscripts if the programme were to be expanded to encompass the whole of China.

  5. Peregrine Smith, 1986, pp. 110-111 2.1.D. P2P as a global platform for autonomous cooperation We have described peer to peer as the technological infrastructure of cognitive capitalism, and as an alternative information and communications infrastructure.

  6. * Book: Alexander Bogdanov. Art and the Working Class. Translated and Introduced by Taylor R. Genovese, Iskra Books, Madison, Wisconsin, 2022. 144 pp. URL = Review Stephan Hammel: ""Art and the Working Class gathers together three articles that had been ...

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