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https://doi.org/10.17645/si.v10i1.4862

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Urban Commons and Collective Action to Address Climate Change

[journal article]

Colding, Johan
Barthel, Stephan
Ljung, Robert
Eriksson, Felix
Sjöberg, Stefan

Abstract

Climate change and the coupled loss of ecosystem services pose major collective action problems in that all individuals would benefit from better cooperation to address these problems but conflicting interests and/or incomplete knowledge discourage joint action. Adopting an inductive and multi‐layer... view more

Climate change and the coupled loss of ecosystem services pose major collective action problems in that all individuals would benefit from better cooperation to address these problems but conflicting interests and/or incomplete knowledge discourage joint action. Adopting an inductive and multi‐layered approach, drawing upon the authors' previous research on urban commons, we here summarize key insights on environmentally oriented urban commons and elaborate on what role they have in instigating climate‐proofing activities in urban areas. We deal with three types of urban commons, i.e., "urban green commons", "coworking spaces", and "community climate commons". We describe how allotment gardens, community gardens, and other types of urban green commons contribute to environmental learning that may boost understanding of environmental issues and which constitute important learning arenas for climate‐change mitigation and adaptation. We also deal with the newly emerging phenomenon of coworking spaces that share many essential institutional attributes of urban commons and which can work for climate‐change mitigation through the benefits provided by a sharing economy and through reduction of domestic transportation and commuting distance. Community climate commons represent commons where local communities can mobilize together to create shared low‐carbon assets and which hold the potential to empower certain segments and civil society groups so that they can have greater influence and ownership of the transformation of reaching net‐zero carbon goals. We conclude this article by identifying some critical determinants for the up‐scaling of environmentally oriented urban commons.... view less

Keywords
climate change; climate protection; collective behavior; mobilization; community; cooperation; communal facility; civilian population

Classification
Ecology, Environment

Free Keywords
civic society; climate change; collective action; community climate commons; coworking spaces; mobilization; urban commons; urban green commons

Document language
English

Publication Year
2022

Page/Pages
p. 103-114

Journal
Social Inclusion, 10 (2022) 1

Issue topic
The Politics and Aesthetics of the Urban Commons: Navigating the Gaze of the City, the State, the Market

ISSN
2183-2803

Status
Published Version; peer reviewed

Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution 4.0


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Home  |  Legal notices  |  Operational concept  |  Privacy policy
© 2007 - 2025 Social Science Open Access Repository (SSOAR).
Based on DSpace, Copyright (c) 2002-2022, DuraSpace. All rights reserved.