Uncovering the rich heritage of common ownership which existed before
the dominance of capitalist property relations, Giovanna Ricoveri argues
that the subsistence commons of the past can be reinvented today to
provide an alternative to the current destructive economic order.
Ricoveri outlines the distinct features of common ownership as it has
existed in history through cooperatives, sustainable use of natural
resources and direct democracy. In doing so, she shows how it is
possible to provide goods and services which are not commodities
exchanged on the capitalistic market, something still demonstrated today
in village communities across the global South. Tracing the erosion of
the commons from the European enclosures at the dawn of the Industrial
Revolution to the new enclosures of modern capitalism, the book
concludes by arguing that a new commons is needed today. It will be
essential reading for activists as well as students and academics in
history, politics, economics and development studies.