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Re: [jox] Re: Direction of the journal (was Re: Ridiculous arguments (was: [jox] Journal report - 19 August 2011))



Hello all,


I hope this list is still working. Below are some crude ideas on the
current situations.  I dare to post them, hoping that you critique,
modify and advance them further.


all the best
Jakob


The currentrevolutionary tasks
1.Capitalism is in afatal crisis.
The crisis has twocomponents:
a-It is a cyclical crisis.
b-      It is also a  crisis due to the hegemony of universal laborin
the global economy. 
2. We have entered anera of transformation from capitalism to communism.
This is characterizedby two major processes. 
a-      The first is the hegemony of universallabor in the global
economy.
b-      The second is the emergence of networkbased organization of
social struggle, on the one hand, and the peer production,on the other.
3.Withoutrevolutionary theory a revolutionary social movement is
impossible.
4. A main defect ofcontemporary movement is the lack of a revolutionary
theory. This does not meanthat we should stop struggle, but that the
theory should catch with thepractice.
The central issues oftheory are the following:
a-      State . The contrary movements either wantto circumvent the
state. Radicals like Badiou, Holloway. Or social democratswho want the
state back.
b-      We should revive the classical revolutionaryposition. The
current state should be smashed and replaced with selforganization of
people. The major resources should be transferred into nationaland
global commons.
c-       The issue of program is a major theoreticalquestion. We need to
write a program. I think the communist Manfifesto and theprogram of the
revolutionary socialism of 19th and 20th centuries are outdated.
 
4.The majorcomponents of a revolutionary program for our time are as
follows:
a.        Theultimate goal of revolutionary movement is to establish
peer production.
b.      The immediate goals are the abolishing ofthe state and the
transfer of strategic resources into universal commons.
This revolution can have different speed in the advanced capitalist
societieswhere the universal labor is truly hegemonic and less advanced
capitalistsocieties. 
A victorious revolution in advanced capitalist societies can
establishpeer production immediately.
In the less advanced societies the revolution will transfer thestrategic
resources into commons and embarks on spreading peer production.
The abolishing of thestate and the appropriation of the bourgeoisie
property are  the major tasks of current revolution
In light of thesetheses, major weaknesses of current movements become
clear.
First, the occupyingwall street , indignados  and even theGreek are
doomed to failure unless they aim at conquering   production sites and
transforming thestrategic resources into commons.
In occupying andappropriating the production sites the revolutionary
movements will encounterthe organized  violence of thestate.  The
revolutionary movement mustbe prepared not only to overcome this
violence but to abolish the state andreplace it with self organization
of producers.
Hence, changing theworld with subverting the power is impossible.
Western capitalism,currently extract enormous rent from other parts of
the world , it shares theserents with the top echelon of the Western
knowledge workers, union leaders,parliament members and political
leaders. Any movement which falls short of thesubversion of the state
and appropriation of major resources only hopes to geta larger share of
the rent for down/trodden in the Western societies.
 
 
 
 llo all,



Michel Bauwens  09/07/11 1:30 PM >>>
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just want to say thanks to Nate for his very wise intervention, one I
can
find myself in,

we have indeed to be examples ourselves of what we want in the world,
even
if that is not easy,

and being human, we fail in varying degrees in doing this,

the journal list should indeed be to discuss the direction and content
of
the journal

Michel

On Wed, Sep 7, 2011 at 4:02 PM, Mathieu ONeil wrote:

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[1 text/plain]
Hi Matt

I agree that we don't want to be restrictive, but we can also
encourage
people to explore specific research paradigms. That's what I was
trying to
say.

cheers

Mathieu

On 09/07/11, Matthew Allen   wrote:
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From my end, watching the debates...

"I could be completely wrong but most people involved in the journal
would be able to place themselves somewhere inside this quadrant."

I certainly can: Marxian approaches work for me, but not in a
totalising
way (which some may disagree with); post-structuralism is useful for
me
because it does imply a critique of its on terms (though sometimes we
act as
if it doesn't). I am trying here not to return to certain debates in
the
1990s that I lived through in Australian universities and would,
therefore,
hope that we don't need 'purity' these days, just intersection.

I would be cautious however about being too narrow in the selection
and
publication of articles. Journals with a very narrow focus and
position
have, yes, a clear identity but they also tend to be read only by a
few
people who already agree with that. A certain diversity of voices
helps to
broaden appeal.

I hope that is useful

Matt


Professor Matthew Allen
Head of Department, Internet Studies
School of Media, Culture and Creative Arts
Curtin University of Technology, CRICOS 00301J Australia
m.allen curtin.edu.au
http://netcrit.net   @netcrit
+61 8 92663511 (v) +61 8 9266 3166 (f)
Australian Learning and Teaching Council Fellow
Life Member, Association of Internet Researchers

________________________________

From: owner-journal oekonux.org on behalf of Mathieu ONeil
Sent: Wed 9/7/2011 4:26 PM
To: journal oekonux.org
Subject: Direction of the journal (was Re: Ridiculous arguments
(was:
[jox] Journal report - 19 August 2011))



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[1 text/plain]
Hi Nate

Thanks for commenting. You raise a lot of good points.

Re. behaviour, unfortunately sometimes it is very hard to remain
dispassionate and reasonable. This is part of what makes us human.
Sorry if
I upset others. I was indeed upset myself, emotionally and even
physically
(insomnia). I feel bad that Alex Halavais left because he
significantly
contributed to our discussions but I don't think the strong words had
much
to do with that, could be wrong but my sense is that he just used the
opportunity of someone else leaving to announce an already-made
decision.

Re. the journal I think of it like this: imagine two perpendicular
axes
which intersect.
One could be called "critical outlook" - with marxism at one end and
post-structuralism (or any other non-marxist methodology) at the other
The other could be called "area of inquiry" with empirical research
at
one end and philosophy/theory at the other

I could be completely wrong but most people involved in the journal
would
be able to place themselves somewhere inside this quadrant.

To my mind there needs to be a balance between having space for all
positions (what you and Michel advocate) and having a clear identity
and
function. This project arose because of Oekonux, and though I have
argued
several times that it is not in any way identical to it, in particular
in
having more diversity of POVs, in my view a core function of the
journal is
to develop a critical distance from existing conditions, namely -
amongst
other factors - industrial capitalism and its attendant
social/ecological
order. For me other perspectives should position themselves around,
complement, criticise this core function, or at any rate try not to
lose
sight of it. This is the activist/critical side. I have been meaning
to
synthetise the various contributions on this we had a couple weeks ago
to
see if we can outline a common position for inclusion in the next
issue.

So I hear what you say about channeling list energy into
publications but
not sure how the energy/conversation can be generated without the
list?

Re. servers etc, there might be a need to do something like that if
problems persist in the future. So far StefanMn has been fine in terms
of
helping out when needed for infrastructure issues. Though not for
website
design. The situation now is one of maximum autonomy for the people
making
the journal. Not sure how that would pan out elsewhere? We need to set
up a
Table of contents page listing all contributions chronologically for
the
next issue. I will try to do this, and see how we go.

OK, this is already longer than I intended.

cheers

Mathieu



On 09/07/11, nathaniel tkacz   wrote:
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[1 text/plain]
I'd like to begin by echoing Athina's plea. Please stop being mean
to
one
another; it is clearly damaging the project. People are leaving.

@mathieu - i understand that you feel insulted and upset, but you
are
also
participating in the ugliness by calling Stefan and troll and a
child.
 These kind of insults are not needed to make your point.

I remember when the accusations of anti-semitism happened and ox
lost
two
important voices (matteo and dmytri). The worst thing about that
debate
was
that it all revolved around a misunderstanding. On the one hand,
Stefan
felt
that Matteo had put forward an inaccurate view of _GNU Society_
and
related
projects (and perhaps he had). On the other hand, Stefan had no
prior
knowledge of the work of Michel Serres and jumped to wrong
conclusions.
His
book, The Parasite, is a theory of relations - a wonderful book
which
is
anything but anti-Semitic. But that's besides the point. Stefan
didn't
hadn't that situation very well, and could have been more modest
in his
response. He definitely should have thought twice about using the
idea
of
anti-Semitism, where attached to a person or the structure of an
argument.
It's obviously deeply insulting either way.

@Stefan you obviously feel strongly about your ideas, but I do
agree
that
you don't express them in ways that show respect for your
interlocutors.

I think that part of the issue revolves around the identity of the
journal,
being not just a publishing avenue for peer-production, but also
an
experiment in it. Thus, what gets talked about bears directly on
what
the
journal should be and how it should be organised.

Here is how I feel about what has been talked about lately:

- We should keep the journal name as it is. While _commons_ may or
may
not
be technically more accurate (and i'm not going either way), _peer
production_ remains the better known title (due to Benkler - and i
know
commons is in their too, but peer production is the term most
often
used). I
also think it's not overly important because the point of a name
is
mostly
to signify the kind of conversation that takes place in the
journal and
both
names would do that fine enough. In fact, i think it's best to
remain
out of
the nuanced debates with regards to the name, because we want it
to
serve as
an umbrella, not a filter. For example, _GNU Society_ or _Oekonux
Futures_
or whatever wouldn't be suitable IMO. _Peer Production_ is nice
and
generic!

- One thing that has been overlooked in the naming conversation is
the
word
_Critical_ in the title. I think this is important. It suggests
that
the
journal is not just about the best way to implement p2p/peer
production
ideas. It is just as much a place to critically reflect on these
processes,
on their strengths and weaknesses, and to weigh up different
versions
against one another. This requires the recognition that different
people on
the list will have different perspectives, which must be
respected. We
all
could learn from how Michel Bauwens manages the p2p
list/foundation,
who
does a wonderful balancing act with all the different positions he
manages
to bring into the fold. If I'm being totally honest, I think this
is
something that Stefan especially needs to work on. Figuring out
how to
encourage critical perspectives without spiraling into silly
attacks is
something we all need to work on.

- One possible solution is to change the format slightly. There
has
been a
lot of discussion on the journal list, and I personally don't
think
it's the
best place for it. Some discussion is ok, but the journal list
should
mostly
be about the journal (new issues, structure, reviews etc.). I
think it
also
alienates members of the committee who don't have the time to
participate as
much. Some of the past discussion is the kind of stuff that could
go
into a
debate section and some could even be worked into full length
articles.
In
other words, we need to channel the energy and conversation from
the
list
and turn it into more publications! Using the academic format
might
also be
a good way for people to work out their disagreements in position
without
having recourse to name-calling.

- I think the journal needs to distance itself from ox. It is not
a
journal
about oekonux, and it doesn't rely on oekonux for its existence or
energy.
We can get another server going and move the content somewhere
else.
That
said, Stefan and whoever else from oekonux have obviously been
super
important and done a great job in helping everything get started.
Oekonux
members are very welcome, but do not hold more authority or esteem
simply
because of that association. The project/journal should not feel
held
back
by its connection to oekonux.

- Generally i think that Mathieu has done a great job as lead
editor. I
am
totally happy with the judgement calls he has made and the way he
has
gone
about things (and all these nice words after getting a slam from
him in
our
_debate_!).

- Finally, some of you know that i am not as openly supportive of
p2p
as
others. Indeed, my work tries to make critical interventions into
the
ways
that people are thinking about these developments. It is not
because I
am
conservative or a champion of capitalism(s), but because I worry
about
p2p
being put forward as an answer to all our problems, as if it won't
have
its
own issues, its own violences. I don't believe that so i try to
point
to
things that go unacknowledged or unseen in these projects. What is
important
in all this, however, is an attempt to improve things. For people
to
get
involved in these projects, they have to be attracted to them.
Maybe
debt-capitalism will explode and that will moves things along, but
i'd
be
very surprised if everyone just decided that p2p was the way to go
in
the
middle of societal breakdown! Thus, the best way to create new
social
alternatives is to make them attractive, to show that there are
better
ways
to do things - better ways to treat one another. Otherwise, why
would
anyone
want to get involved? This is also true for the journal.

best

Nate Tkacz

ARC Research Associate
Genealogies of Digital Light
The University of Melbourne
Site: http://www.digital-light.net.au/

PhD Candidate
School of Culture and Communication
The University of Melbourne

Twitter: http://twitter.com/__nate__

Research Page: http://nathanieltkacz.net 



On Tue, Sep 6, 2011 at 10:30 PM, Mathieu ONeil <
mathieu.oneil anu.edu.au>wrote:

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Hi Athina, all

First, welcome to the fiftieth subscriber to this list, who just
signed up!

Second, sorry about the heat but IMHO this has now gone beyond a
private
issue.

Obviously Stefan Merten has contributed enormously to the
project -
by
organising the Oekonux conference at which some of us met, which
led
to my
putting my hand up as editor of this journal; and by setting up
the
website.
But since March(?) of this year he decided to step back because
of
disagreement over the publication process. It now appears he is
disillusioned with the journal (a "dead horse" in his own words)
yet
insists
on enforcing rigid definitions of appropriate content. In
addition he
has
engaged in the following:

-inflammatory language (see previous messages to Michel or me)
-unfounded accusations (I am apparently engaging in backdoor
machinations
to "fight the spirit of Oekonux" - whatever that is)
-blatant lying (cf. "I never attacked anyone for being an
antisemite"
- oh
yeah, whats this?)
-insistence on process issues (should the journal list be used
for
this or
that? my view is, the people on the list can use the list
however
they see
fit without referring to some "charter")
-so it all ends being about him - his views, his difficult
behaviour
- will
he answer message x, y, z, and when? -, how we should deal with
the
fact he
doesn't seem to _get it_
when several people (me, Christian, Michel) try to explain that
there
is
 not one orthodoxy here, that multiple POVs are allowed. Someone
who
wanted
to engage in amateur psychology might say he appears to be -
subconsciously?
- "trolling" the
project he helped create, like a child who can't get his chosen
toy
and
decides to
spoil the party.

The question is, should we continue to put up with this? Only
Michel
and I
have stood up to the bullying. Should others say what they
think? The
sad
thing is, Stefan has a uniquely central role to play in this
project
because
of his knowledge about peer production and his technical skills
-
there are
lots of things that need to be done to the website for example -
but
his
insistence on one orthodoxy and his abrasive behaviour make it
very
hard to
work with him...

cheers,

Mathieu

On 09/06/11, Athina Karatzogianni   wrote:
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[1 text/plain]
Dear Mathieu, Stefan, and I ll include here Michel as well
because
of the
other discussion currently unfolding.

May I suggest that the interpersonal issues that you may have
are
discussed
in private and not on the list in such a public way, which
really
is not
appropriate. As an outsider I can tell you that it just makes
a
bizarre
read
and we could all do without the accelerated affect usually
accompanying
emails of this nature, and get on with the projects at hand.
Whatever
issues
you may have between you it is really not of interest here and
they
do
not
diminish the contributions you have made in your respective
projects. I
think lets see more of that and less of this.

I hope my intervention is taken as intended.

Lets get over all this, we all have more things in common than
not.

Athina


On Tue, Sep 6, 2011 at 6:28 AM, Mathieu ONeil <
mathieu.oneil anu.edu.au
wrote:

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[1 text/plain]
Hi Stefan

I understand you are probably still upset that the
publication /
peer
process is not  more distributed or transparent. If there is
a
way for
people to post for examples reviews and remain 100%
anonymous,
fine. If
you
want to experiment with ways to do that that do not affect
the
journal's
work, fine.

However:

I have consistently tried to offer you a platform to _say
what
you
think_.
I fail to see how this is "building strawmen".
I have consistently tried to achieve consensus from the
community.
I have consistently encouraged all to express themselves
freely.
I have consistently tried to be as fair and open as
possible,
both on
and
offlist.

I dare you to bring up any issue that contradicts this.

If there is anything _real_ or _concrete_ that you want to
raise,
go
right
ahead. But if all you want to do is vent your spleen at
things
not
going
exactly how you want, then I would request that you maintain
these
feelings
where they belong, in your mind, and not on this list, as
they
are _not
helping_. This is causing me stress and anxiety and I am
tired of
it.

Some of the statements below are bordering on the
pathological.
What
have I
done "behind the scenes"? I merely pointed out that only
StefanMz
had
supported your position - that is the _reality_ of what
happened.
How
is
this "setting up parties"? What "other stuff" do you mean?
This
is
grotesque
name-calling and bullying.

Mathieu





Thanks for the offer but after building up strawmen and
front
lines
above this sounds somewhat strange...


Mathieu, this project started after the fourth Oekonux
Conference and
I understood that it's goal is to keep this spirit. My
impression is
that you are fighting this spirit behind the scenes - like
with
setting up parties and using ridiculous arguments like
above
but also
with other stuff.

Mathieu, if you want to make CSPP (or how you are going to
call
it
tomorrow) something which contradicts Oekonux then this is
your
decision I have to respect. From a few seasoned leftists
during
all
these years I heard things like "Oekonux is something
which
restores
hope - *although* it is not the same old stuff!". In fact
this
is why
I like Oekonux and it's spirit. If you want to move this
project to
the same old, same old then you should make this clear
ASAP.
Then
everyone here can make a decision on how to proceed. BTW:
A
mixture
of
same old and new open-mindedness seems stupid to me
because it
doesn't
serve anybody really.


                                              Grüße

                                              Stefan


--
****
Dr Mathieu O'Neil
Adjunct Research Fellow
Australian Demographic and Social Research Institute
College of Arts and Social Science
The Australian National University
email: mathieu.oneil[at]anu.edu.au
web: http://adsri.anu.edu.au/people/visitors/mathieu.php


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______________________________
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--

Dr Athina Karatzogianni<


http://www2.hull.ac.uk/FASS/humanities/media,_culture_and_society/staff/karatzogianni,_dr_athina.aspx

Lecturer in Media, Culture and Society
Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences
The University of Hull
United Kingdom
HU6 7RX
T: ++44 (0) 1482 46 5790
F: ++44 (0) 1482 466107
E: a.karatzogianni hull.ac.uk

Download my work for free here:
http://works.bepress.com/athina_karatzogianni/


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______________________________
http://www.oekonux.org/journal


--
****
Dr Mathieu O'Neil
Adjunct Research Fellow
Australian Demographic and Social Research Institute
College of Arts and Social Science
The Australian National University
email: mathieu.oneil[at]anu.edu.au
web: http://adsri.anu.edu.au/people/visitors/mathieu.php


[2 text/html]
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______________________________
http://www.oekonux.org/journal


--
****
Dr Mathieu O'Neil
Adjunct Research Fellow
Australian Demographic and Social Research Institute
College of Arts and Social Science
The Australian National University
email: mathieu.oneil[at]anu.edu.au
web: http://adsri.anu.edu.au/people/visitors/mathieu.php


[2 text/html]
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--
****
Dr Mathieu O'Neil
Adjunct Research Fellow
Australian Demographic and Social Research Institute
College of Arts and Social Science
The Australian National University
email: mathieu.oneil[at]anu.edu.au
web: http://adsri.anu.edu.au/people/visitors/mathieu.php


[2 text/html]
______________________________
http://www.oekonux.org/journal




-- 
P2P Foundation: http://p2pfoundation.net  -
http://blog.p2pfoundation.net

Connect: http://p2pfoundation.ning.com; Discuss:
http://lists.ourproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/p2p-foundation

Updates: http://del.icio.us/mbauwens; http://friendfeed.com/mbauwens;
http://twitter.com/mbauwens; http://www.facebook.com/mbauwens


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