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Emerging common spaces as a challenge to the city of crisis

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  • Stavros Stavrides

Abstract

This paper explores potential links between the project of emancipating autonomy and urban commoning by tracing the development of experiences connected to the creation of common spaces in crisis-ridden Athens. It is maintained that for commoning to remain an active force against social and urban enclosures, commoning has to remain 'infectious' and to expand by overspilling the boundaries of any defined community. Threshold spatiality shapes common spaces which support expanding commoning. Moreover, institutions of expanding commoning remain correspondingly open and osmotic by ensuring that collective actions become comparable, translatable to each other and controlled by mechanisms which obstruct any form of accumulation of power. City space, thus, is not only transformed and reclaimed through practices of expanding commoning but also actively contributes to the shaping of commoning institutions.

Suggested Citation

  • Stavros Stavrides, 2014. "Emerging common spaces as a challenge to the city of crisis," City, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 18(4-5), pages 546-550, October.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:cityxx:v:18:y:2014:i:4-5:p:546-550
    DOI: 10.1080/13604813.2014.939476
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    Citations

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    Cited by:

    1. Abdoumaliq Simone, 2020. "(Non)Urban Humans: Questions for a Research Agenda (the Work the Urban Could Do)," International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, Wiley Blackwell, vol. 44(4), pages 755-767, July.
    2. Matina Kapsali & Maria Karagianni, 2017. "Book review: Common Space: The City as Commons," Urban Studies, Urban Studies Journal Limited, vol. 54(11), pages 2674-2677, August.
    3. Ioanneta Dimouli & Dimitra Koumparou & Spyridon K. Golfinopoulos, 2024. "From School Gardens to Community Oases: Fostering Environmental and Social Resilience in Urban Spaces," Geographies, MDPI, vol. 4(4), pages 1-26, November.
    4. Viviana Asara, 2018. "Untangling the radical imaginaries of the Indignados' movement: Commons, autonomy and ecologism," SRE-Disc sre-disc-2018_04, Institute for Multilevel Governance and Development, Department of Socioeconomics, Vienna University of Economics and Business.
    5. Maria Karagianni, 2024. "The urban political ecology of the commons or commoning as a socio-natural process: The case of the Peri-Urban Gardening group in Thessaloniki," Urban Studies, Urban Studies Journal Limited, vol. 61(6), pages 1147-1167, May.
    6. Athina Arampatzi, 2017. "The spatiality of counter-austerity politics in Athens, Greece: Emergent ‘urban solidarity spaces’," Urban Studies, Urban Studies Journal Limited, vol. 54(9), pages 2155-2171, July.
    7. María José Zapata Campos & Patrik Zapata & Isabel Ordoñez, 2020. "Urban commoning practices in the repair movement: Frontstaging the backstage," Environment and Planning A, , vol. 52(6), pages 1150-1170, September.
    8. Ross Beveridge & Philippe Koch, 2021. "Contesting austerity, de-centring the state: Anti-politics and the political horizon of the urban," Environment and Planning C, , vol. 39(3), pages 451-468, May.
    9. Charalampos Tsavdaroglou, 2019. "Reimagining a Transnational Right to the City: No Border Actions and Commoning Practices in Thessaloniki," Social Inclusion, Cogitatio Press, vol. 7(2), pages 219-229.

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