Index

Randal Joy Thompson (Foreword by Devin Paul Singh)

Proleptic Leadership on the Commons: Ushering in a New Global Order

ISBN: 978-1-83867-800-5, eISBN: 978-1-83867-799-2

Publication date: 22 October 2020

This content is currently only available as a PDF

Citation

Thompson, R.J. (2020), "Index", Proleptic Leadership on the Commons: Ushering in a New Global Order, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 203-211. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-83867-799-220201016

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020 Emerald Publishing Limited


INDEX

Note: Page numbers followed by “n” indicate footnotes.

Ability
, 175

Absolute individual rights
, 8

Absolute Spirit
, 90

Action
, 164, 180

Actualization hierarchies
, 159

Adaptive leadership
, 151, 154–155

Adaptive social systems
, 114

Administrative leadership
, 151

Adventus
, 168

Agricultural sector, enclosure in
, 34–35

Allometry
, 97

Alter-globalization
, 27–28

Anti-capital-centric model
, 187

Anti-capitalist perspectives on commons
, 56–57

Anticommons
, 37

Auto-production
, 136

Autopoiesis
, 119, 136–137, 162–163

Awareness
, 20–21, 44, 49, 88, 90, 164, 170–173, 176

Bauwens, Michel
, 24, 27, 35, 83, 97, 113–118, 123, 127, 130–131, 142–143, 148, 162, 185

Benkler, Yokai
, 22–24, 43, 48, 50–51, 87

Biogenetics
, 96

Biopolitical production
, 93n2–95

Bollier, David
, 3–6, 8–9, 13, 19, 21, 23–24, 28, 31, 33, 36–37, 41, 46, 65, 66, 77–78, 82, 87, 133, 137, 141–143, 148, 152, 159, 162, 164, 185

Burning Man
, 65n1, 69, 71–72

Caffentzis, George
, 27–28, 56–57, 64

Capital
, 10, 186

Capital accumulation
, 54–55

Capitalism
, 10, 54–55, 91, 95, 115

Capitalist(s)
, 10

private property
, 10

society
, 8

Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone (CHAZ)
, 183–184

Care
, 80

Caring
, 172

Catalan Community Commons (CIC)
, 146

Climate change
, 104–105

crisis
, 52

Climate crisis
, 92–93

Cognitive capitalism
, 97

Cognitive praxis
, 78

Collaborative commons
, 91–92, 96

Collaborative consumption
, 51–52

Collective intelligence
, 176

Collective leadership
, 155–156

Collective structuring patterns
, 165

Colonialism
, 13

Commodification
, 38–39, 64

Commodities consensus
, 35

Common pool resources (CPRs)
, 16–19, 22

Common property regime (CPR)
, 63

Commonalisation
, 119

Commoners
, 3, 6, 18, 29, 161

alternative modes of production
, 118–119

commons-centric society
, 119–120

complexities of transition
, 124–125

post-capitalist transition
, 117

prefigurative movements
, 113–114

radical municipal activism
, 116

role in transition
, 113

role of social movements
, 123–124

social revolution
, 115

views of commons transition
, 120–123

Commonification
, 118

Commoning
, 59, 64, 66, 74, 76, 78, 121, 136, 162

and community
, 85–87

leading oneself through values of
, 172

practice
, 3

and values
, 88

“Commoning elitism”
, 134

Commons
, 3, 31, 43, 63–64, 69, 83, 162–163

capitalism and capital accumulation
, 54–55

collaborative consumption and sharing economy
, 51–52

commons and enclosure beyond England
, 12–13

commons-based laws
, 3

commons-based peer production
, 23–25

commons-based society
, 162

commons-centric language
, 141

to commons-centric society
, 88

crisis and survival
, 52–54

dualism
, 3–4

emergence of relational ontology
, 48

enclosure movement in England
, 7–9

end of land enclosure in England
, 12

environmental awakening
, 44

in Feudal Europe
, 5–6

flattening of organizations and self-organizing systems
, 48–49

gender and commons
, 13–14

historical sketch of
, 4–5

humans models as cooperative rather than competitive
, 47

identifying phenomena as
, 43–44

increasing inequality and changing employment
, 44–46

industrial paradigm
, 14

Internet and noose of neoliberal capitalism
, 46–47

justification of enclosure
, 9–10

leadership theory
, 49–50

Leviathan vs. Penguin
, 48

moral divide
, 47

neoliberalism and enclosure of
, 38

Network
, 29

networks and network thinking
, 50–51

politics of
, 131

pro-capitalist vs. anti-capitalist perspectives on commons
, 56–57

and question of evil and elitism
, 132–133

resistance to enclosure and moral justification for
, 10–12

self-awareness
, 136

social crisis and precariat
, 57–59

in subsistence economies
, 19

theoretical perspectives on rise of commons
, 54

Transition Platform
, 29

Commons Act (1876)
, 12

Commons Strategy Group
, 29

Commons-centric society
, 88, 98, 114, 119–120, 127

centralized ideologies
, 96–97

challenges with state
, 131

climate crisis
, 92–93

collaborative commons
, 91–92

commons and question of evil and elitism
, 132–133

complexities of change process
, 128–130

confronting state
, 131–132

consciousness
, 98–105

external shocks
, 127–128

fighting intellectual property laws
, 94–95

gentler, sustainable capitalism and participatory municipalities
, 135

implications
, 111–112

insufficient resources to live autonomously
, 130–131

integral theory of consciousness
, 105–108

internal challenges
, 133–135

Kaleidoscope of consciousnesses and Western-centric perspective
, 130

liminality
, 97–98, 108–111

limitations of systems approach
, 136–137

marginalized commons
, 130

nature of systems change
, 127

need for commons self-awareness
, 136

organizing principle of universe
, 90–91

overarching theories of socio-economic change
, 89–90

social imaginary
, 97–98, 108–111

transition to
, 93

Communal governance models, leadership with
, 157–158

Communal intelligence
, 176

Communism
, 94, 123

Community
, 4, 85–87

community/organizational level process
, 185–186

Complex adaptive systems (CAS)
, 141

leadership
, 161

and leading from nature
, 149

Complexity leadership
, 151–152

Computer-generated voices
, 45

Confrontational approach
, 131

Consciousness
, 90, 97–105, 169–172

integral theory of
, 105–108

Kaleidoscope of
, 130

Contemporary environmentalist movement
, 20

Contemporary interest proliferation in commons
, 19–21

Contextual intelligence
, 173

Contextual thinking
, 171–172

Cooperative Integral Catalana (CIC)
, 86–87

“Coordinating leaders”
, 150

Copyright laws
, 36

Coronavirus pandemic
, 47, 144

Corporations
, 44

Cosmo-capitalism
, 46

Creative Commons
, 29

Crisis
, 52–54, 109

and proleptic leadership
, 177

Critical abilities of leading oneself
, 172–174

Cryptocurrencies
, 97

Customary law
, 16

Dardot, Pierre
, 3–4, 28, 45–46, 82–84, 113–114, 119–120, 131–132, 173, 179, 187

Das Kapital
, 10

De Angelis
, 10, 58–59, 64, 67, 72–73, 76, 78, 85, 113–115, 118–119, 123–124, 127, 131, 133, 136, 143, 148, 162, 185, 186

“De-commodifying”
, 172

Decision-making processes
, 157–158, 171

Deep democracy, accountability, and loosening boundaries (DAB)
, 119

Democracy
, 22, 44

Democratic participation
, 123

Design leaders
, 150

Developmentalists
, 96, 108, 124, 166, 171

Digital commoning
, 22

Digital divide
, 40–41

Digital revolutions
, 89

Digital rights management
, 37

Dissipative system structures
, 127

Distributed intelligence
, 96

Distributed leadership
, 152

Diversity
, 153

Do-it-together (DIT)
, 117

Dueling revolutions
, 36

Earth Summit
, 20

Eco-synergizing
, 172

Ecology
, 95–96

Ecomangar
, 146

Edwards, Andres
, 20–21, 80, 179

Efficiency
, 18

Emergence
, 116

Emotional intelligence
, 173

Emparkment
, 8

Empathic sensitivity
, 104

Enclosure
, 9, 31

in agricultural sector
, 34–35

beyond England
, 12–13

justification of
, 9–10

of knowledge commons
, 35–37

movement in England
, 7–9

of public property and commons
, 38

resistance to enclosure and moral justification for commons
, 10–12

of water
, 32–34

England

commons and enclosure beyond England
, 12–13

enclosure movement in
, 7–9

end of land enclosure in
, 12

Entrepreneurial leadership
, 151

Environmental awakening
, 44

Equipotentiality
, 25

Estover
, 5

European Commons Assembly (ECA)
, 27

External articulators
, 145

External commons
, 96

External shocks
, 127–128

Facilitative leadership
, 149–150

Federation
, 159

of agricultural cooperative
, 129

of commons
, 115, 184

individual commons in
, 120

mobilizing leadership for commons
, 148–149

NGO
, 27

Feedback
, 153

Feudal Europe, commons in
, 5–6

Feudalism
, 7

“15-M Movement”
, 52

Financial crisis (2008)
, 52

Foundation on Economic Trends (FOET)
, 38

Frederici, Silvia
, 14, 59, 64, 85, 120–121, 169

Futurum
, 168

Gender and commons
, 13–14

Genetically modified foods (GMOs)
, 70

Gentler
, 135

Global Commons Alliance
, 29

Global consciousness
, 96

Global Crop Diversity Trust
, 41

Global divide
, 40–41

Global justice movements
, 27–28

Global resonance
, 174–175

Global Social Justice Movements
, 59

Globalization
, 44

Globalization of intellectual property rights
, 37–38

Google Docs
, 180

Google Forms
, 180

Governance
, 142

Gratefulness
, 82

Graves’ model of spiral dynamics
, 105

Great Recession (2008)
, 32, 57

Green economy
, 124

Green leaders
, 171

Green Revolution
, 35

Grey Goose laws
, 12

Grounded theory
, 171

commoning and community
, 85–87

commoning and values
, 88

of commons
, 63–64, 66

relationship process
, 64–65

research of commons
, 65–66

resonating self-and-society
, 80–82

self-protagonizing
, 74–80

sub-variables comprising communing
, 67

supplanting paradigm
, 67–74

transforming
, 83–85

Hardin, Garrett
, 9, 15–17

“Healing Biotope” model
, 134

Helfrich
, 66, 77–78, 82, 84, 87, 113–117, 127, 129–131, 133, 136–137, 141–143, 148, 152, 159, 162, 164, 185

Hess, Charlotte
, 16–19, 21–23, 25, 36, 43–44

Historical developmental framework
, 117

Holocracy
, 135

Homo cooperantus
, 43

Homo economics
, 43, 46

Horizontality
, 159

Human action framework
, 79, 89, 163–164, 166

Human nature
, 163

Human resources
, 31

Human structuring interactions
, 164

Humans models as cooperative rather than competitive
, 47

Hunting-and-gathering societies
, 4

Hurricane Sandy
, 153

Indignados Movement
, 52

Individual agency
, 162–166

Individual Consciousness
, 185

Individual structuring interactions
, 165

Industrial Revolution
, 8

Inequality
, 44–46

Info-dustrial Evolution
, 96

Information

age
, 89

commons
, 22

technology revolution
, 91

Inherently public property
, 16–19

Institutional Analysis and Development Framework (IAD Framework)
, 18–19

Institutionalist approach
, 17

Integral theorists
, 107, 108, 171

Integral theory of consciousness
, 105–108

Integrity
, 175

Intellectual property
, 96

Intellectual property rights
, 22, 32, 35

globalization and expansion of
, 37–38

Intellectual resources
, 37

Internal commons
, 96

Internal mobilizers
, 145

International Association for the Study of the Commons (IASC)
, 28

International Monetary Fund (IMF)
, 28, 32, 52

International support for commons
, 27

Internet
, 21, 32, 43, 46–47, 71, 91, 92, 152

as commons
, 21–22

search companies
, 40

Internet of Things
, 92, 104

Jaworski, Joseph
, 49, 170–171

Kegan, Robert
, 90, 106–108, 166

Kellerman, Barbara
, 5, 12, 50, 173

Knowledge commons
, 22, 37

enclosure of
, 35–37

Knowledge economy
, 141

Labor
, 45, 74

Laval, Christian
, 3–4, 28, 45–46, 82–84, 113, 119–120, 131, 173, 179, 187

Lead with others
, 50

Leaders
, 142–143, 161

as buffers and bonding element vis-a-vis external forces
, 145–146

catalysts
, 146–147

as catalysts, brokers, and political representatives
, 144–145

as functional brokers who also bridge cultural divides
, 146

as political representatives
, 147–148

Leadership
, 49, 141, 143–144, 150, 161, 165. See also Proleptic leadership

adaptive leadership
, 154–155

CAS and leading from nature
, 149

commons not organizations
, 159

complexity
, 151–152

governance
, 142–143

hierarchy and leadership
, 158–

holding whole
, 156–157

information/knowledge society
, 141–142

leader catalysts
, 146–147

leaders as buffers and bonding element vis-a-vis external forces
, 145–146

leaders as catalysts, brokers, and political representatives
, 144–145

leaders as functional brokers who also bridge cultural divides
, 146

leaders as political representatives
, 147–148

leadership not governance
, 157

leading from nature
, 152–153

mobilizing leadership for commons federations
, 148–149

network
, 149–151

peer-to-peer leadership
, 153–154

with sociocracy and other communal governance models
, 157–158

system and collective leadership
, 155–156

theory
, 49–50, 141

transformational leadership
, 156

variables
, 144

Leading community
, 176–177

proleptically
, 172

Leading from nature
, 149, 152–153

Leading oneself
, 172

critical abilities of
, 172–174

through values of commoning
, 172

Leading proleptically
, 166–169, 173

preparing oneself to lead proleptically
, 169–170

Leading with others
, 172

“Leapfrog” strategy
, 149

Levels of consciousness
, 90, 98, 104–105, 107, 124, 130, 166, 171, 173

Levine, Peter
, 22, 44

Liberalism
, 96

Liminality
, 97–98, 108–111, 177–181

Linebaugh, Peter
, 5–6, 8–12, 23, 31, 58, 64, 66, 76, 78

Linux collaborative operating system
, 70

Love
, 122

Macro level commoners
, 162–164, 175–176

Maine Lobstermen Association (MLA)
, 146–147

Makers Infrastructure
, 92

Management
, 161

Marginalized commons
, 130

Market triumphalism
, 39

Marketization of life
, 10

Marx, Karl
, 10, 12, 32, 118, 166

Marx’s theory of historical materialism
, 90

Mechanization
, 9

Meso level commoners
, 162–166, 171, 174

Meta level commoners
, 162, 164–165, 176

Mexican Constitution
, 31

Micro individual level
, 166

Mindfulness
, 180

Mobilizing leadership for commons federations
, 148–149

Monetization
, 8

Moral divide
, 47

Multiplication
, 119

Multitude
, 137

Natural resource commons
, 63

Neo-feudal cognitive capitalism
, 97

Neoliberal capitalism, noose of
, 46–47

Neoliberalism
, 32

and enclosure of public property and commons
, 38

Nested hierarchies
, 159

Netarchical cognitive capitalism
, 97

Network gardeners
, 150

Network guardianship
, 150

Network leadership
, 149–151

Network thinking
, 50–51

Networkers
, 148

Networks
, 50–51

Non-governmental organizations (NGOs)
, 27

Non-human resources
, 31

North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
, 32

Occupy movement
, 65n1

Occupy Sandy
, 72, 153–154

Open cooperatives
, 117

Open Spaces Society
, 12

Open-access journals
, 38

Open-field farming
, 7

Operational capacity
, 145

Operational leadership
, 151

Organizational photosynthesis
, 152

Organizational theory
, 48

Ostrom, Elinor
, 16–18, 22, 28, 36, 63, 64, 110, 141–144, 150, 157, 158

Overarching theories of socio-economic change
, 89

Oxymoronic utopias
, 59

Pannage
, 6

Paradoxes
, 90

Participatory municipalities
, 135

Peer-to-peer (P2P)
, 52

leadership
, 149, 153–154, 162

production
, 23–24, 27, 63

Piscary
, 6

Platform cooperatives
, 118

Political representatives, leaders as
, 147–148

Politics of commons
, 131

Possessive individualism
, 14

Post-capitalist transition
, 114, 117, 183

Precariat
, 57–59

Prefigurative commons-centric economy
, 114

Prefiguring
, 84

Primitive accumulation
, 9–10

Private property
, 13

Privatization
, 38–39

Pro-capitalist perspectives on commons
, 56–57

Productive social circuits
, 82

Productivity
, 74

Profit-making corporations
, 40

Prolepsis
, 166–169

Proleptic ethics
, 168–169

Proleptic leadership
, 162

consciousness
, 171–172

crisis and
, 177

critical abilities of leading oneself
, 172–174

individual agency
, 162–166

leading community
, 176–177

leading oneself, leading with others, leading community proleptically
, 172

leading oneself through values of commoning
, 172

leading with others proleptically
, 174–176

liminality
, 177–181

opening oneself to future
, 170–171

preparing oneself to lead proleptically
, 169–170

prolepsis and leading proleptically
, 166–169

proleptic ethics
, 168–169

social imaginary
, 181

impact of universal on micro individual level
, 166

visionary leader
, 161

Property
, 5

“Property in Land Everyone’s Right”
, 11

Protesting
, 83–84

Prototyping
, 81

leaders
, 150

Public property, neoliberalism and enclosure of
, 38

Public trust doctrine
, 4

Public trust theory
, 16

Purposeful leadership
, 135

Quantum physics
, 90

Queen of Versailles (movie)
, 47

Radical municipal activism
, 116

Re-emergence of commons

alter-globalization, global justice movements, and commons
, 27–28

commons in subsistence economies
, 19

commons-based peer production
, 23–25

groups formed to support expansion of commons
, 28–29

“inherently public property” and common pool resources
, 16–19

international support for commons
, 27

internet as commons
, 21–22

knowledge and information commons
, 22

new commons and transformative power of commons
, 23

other commons emerge as part of “new commons”
, 25

proliferation of contemporary interest in commons
, 19–21

tragedy of commons
, 15–16

urban commons
, 26

Relational ontology
, 116

Relational ontology, emergence of
, 48

Religious traditions
, 171

Remix Commons
, 29

Res communes
, 4

Resistance to enclosure
, 10

Resonance
, 81

Resonating self-and-society
, 66–67, 80–82

Rhizomatic movements
, 110

Rifkin, Jeremy
, 5–7, 38, 41, 45, 51–52, 89, 91–93, 98, 104–105, 108, 113–114, 124, 166, 176, 186

Rio Declaration
, 20

Robotics
, 96

revolutions
, 89

“Sane leadership”
, 156

Scharmer, Otto
, 49, 156, 169, 170, 183, 187

Second enclosure movement

battle against enclosure
, 41

commodities consensus
, 35

contemporary new enclosures
, 31–32

digital divide
, 40–41

enclosure in agricultural sector
, 34–35

enclosure of knowledge commons
, 35–37

enclosure of water
, 32–34

ethical arguments against enclosure
, 39–40

foreclosure of future
, 38

globalization and expansion of intellectual property rights
, 37–38

increasing enclosure of internet
, 40

neoliberalism and enclosure of public property and commons
, 38

rise of anticommons
, 37

Second Law of Thermodynamics
, 90

Seed-sharing commons
, 35

Self-governance
, 70

Self-governing commons
, 69

Self-leadership
, 172

Self-organizing commons
, 69

Self-organizing systems
, 48–49

Self-protagonizing
, 66–67, 74–80

Self-provisioning
, 76, 172

Senge, Peter
, 49, 155–156, 161–162, 170

Sensorica
, 25

Shared natural resources
, 15

management
, 16

Sharing
, 70

Sharing economy
, 51–52

Shiva, Vandana
, 33–35

Social action theory
, 88

Social capital
, 144

Social crisis
, 57–59, 109

Social fabric
, 124

Social imaginary
, 97–98, 108–111, 181

Social intelligence
, 173

Social justice
, 83

Social movements
, 123–124, 131

Social revolution
, 115

Social structuring
, 163–164

Social transformation
, 120, 187

Social-Ecological Systems Framework (SES)
, 17, 19, 28, 141

Socialism
, 123

Societal evolution
, 183

Society
, 4, 166

Socio-economic evolution
, 91

Socio-economic order
, 89

Socio-economic system
, 97

Socio-economic transition
, 114

Sociocracy
, 142

leadership with
, 157–158

Spirituality
, 173

State
, 4

Stigmergy
, 25

Structural Adjustment Programs (SAPs)
, 28, 56

Structuring interactions
, 163–164

Subjectivities
, 185

Subsistence economies, commons in
, 19

Supplanting a paradigm
, 66–74

Survival
, 52–54

Sustainability
, 18, 67, 143

Sustainable capitalism
, 135

Sustainable energy
, 91

System leadership
, 155–156

System theory
, 90

System-level adaptive leadership
, 155

Systems theory
, 49, 142

“Take the Square Movement”
, 52

Technology
, 107, 152, 154

Terra nullius
, 14

Terrestrials
, 105

Theoretical codes
, 65–66

Third Industrial Revolution
, 52

communication/energy matrix
, 92

“Thought leaders”
, 150

3D maker movement
, 92

3D printers
, 91n1, 176

“Three E’s plus one” criteria
, 20–21

Traditional positional leaders
, 151

Tragedy of the Commons
, 15–16

Transformational leadership
, 156

Transformative power of commons
, 23

Transforming
, 67

Transparency
, 86

Trust
, 86, 175

Turbary
, 6

United Nations (UN)
, 27

Urban commons
, 26

Urban initiatives
, 26–27

Ushering in new global order
, 183–188

Usufruct
, 5

Venturum
, 168

Visionaries
, 148

Visionary leader
, 161

Water enclosure
, 32–34

Water security
, 34

We-ing
, 75, 172

Wheatley, Margaret
, 48, 57, 90–91, 98, 105, 127–128, 137, 157, 161

Winstanley, Gerrard
, 11

World Bank
, 28, 32–34, 56–57

World Social Forum
, 27, 41