The Commons across Cultures: Exploring Shared Resources, Past and Present

Overview

The commons can be understood as meaning an area of land or other resource, which can be used for the common good. Its second, more general meaning, designates shared forms of culture or cultural resources existing beyond private ownership. 

There is a great current interest in the commons, extending across multiple disciplines. Historians have long been interested in the history of the commons and the forms of enclosure which have taken common land into private hands. Economists continue to debate whether the commons can exist in the long term, with Garret Hardin’s ‘tragedy of the commons’ opposed by Elinor Ostrom, in work for which she won the Nobel Prize. Ostrom stressed the forms of collective action needed to conserve the commons. Archaeologists are probing the deep history of the commons and anthropologists are using it as a means of thinking in a new way about the shared nature of culture. Geographers, philosophers and legal scholars are also developing the idea of the commons at a global level, contributing to debates on ownership and access. 

This day event explores the idea of the commons from multiple perspectives, including indigenous views from groups in the Amazon Basin, whether genetic material can be seen as a commons and the history of the enclosure of common land. Exploring the past existence of various forms of commons is important, but there is also much important debate on how the notion of the commons could be useful in a period where much of culture is being taken into private ownership, as well as being of use in countering the effects of ecological degradation and climate change. 

Please note: this event will close to enrolments at 23:59 UTC on 27 November 2024.

Programme details

10.15am    
Registration (in-person attendees only)

10.30am     
The commons: an introduction 
Chris Gosden 

11.45am    
Tea/coffee break

12.15pm   
Enclosing global commons: from genes to poles 
Sarah Whatmore 

1.30pm     
Lunch break

2.30pm     
Commons beyond community: a view from Amazonia
Harry Walker

3.45pm    
Tea/coffee break 

4.15pm        
The commons as an ecological management strategy: the Fenland experience
John Robb  

5.30pm     
End of day  

Fees

Description Costs
Course Fee - in-person attendance (includes tea/coffee) £120.00
Course Fee - virtual attendance £110.00
Baguette Lunch £7.30
Hot Lunch £19.25

Funding

If you are in receipt of a UK state benefit or are a full-time student in the UK you may be eligible for a reduction of 50% of tuition fees.

Concessionary fees for short courses

Tutors

Prof Chris Gosden

Course Director and Speaker

Chris Gosden holds a research professorship in archaeology and has worked extensively on the archaeology of Oxfordshire since 1994, as well as carrying out fieldwork in many other parts of the world. He is author of a wide range of books including The History of Magic: From Alchemy to Witchcraft, from the Ice Age to the Present (2020). He is currently writing a world history, entitled Humans: The First Seven Million Years.

Prof Sarah Whatmore

Speaker

Sarah Whatmore is Professor of Environment and Public Policy in the School of Geography and the Environment at the University of Oxford. She is a cultural geographer by training, a Fellow of the British Academy and was a member of Defra’s Science Advisory Council for 8 years, Chairing its Social Science Expert Group. She has written about the contested extension of private property rights associated with the creation of ‘new’ resources in the 20th/21st centuries in her book Hybrid Geographies (Sage, 2001).

Dr Harry Walker

Speaker

Harry Walker is a social anthropologist with research interests centring on everyday understandings of morality and politics, particularly with respect to the indigenous peoples of the Amazon rainforest. He is currently writing a book on the emotions, based on long-term fieldwork among the Urarina people of Amazonian Peru. 

Dr John Robb

Speaker

John Robb teaches European Prehistory and Archaeological Theory at Cambridge University. He is interested in politics and long-term history, as they apply to many topics ranging from art and biography to health and ecology. 

Application

Please use the 'Book' button on this page. Alternatively, please contact us to obtain an application form.

Accommodation

Accommodation is not included in the price, but if you wish to stay with us the night before the course, then please contact our Residential Centre.

Accommodation in Rewley House - all bedrooms are modern, comfortably furnished and each room has tea and coffee making facilities, Freeview television, and Free WiFi and private bath or shower rooms.  Please contact our Residential Centre on +44 (0) 1865 270362 or email res-ctr@conted.ox.ac.uk for details of availability and discounted prices.

IT requirements

For those joining us online

We will be using Zoom for the livestreaming of this event. If you’re attending online, you’ll be able to see and hear the speakers, and to submit questions via the Zoom interface. Joining instructions will be sent out prior to the start date. We recommend that you join the session at least 10-15 minutes prior to the start time – just as you might arrive a bit early at our lecture theatre for an in-person event.

Please note that this course will not be recorded.