Toward a Cartography of the Commons: Constituting the Political and Economic Possibilities of Place
Competing with the cartography of capitalism, undermining its power to fix resources as open to capitalist appropriation and space as enclosed, will require a cartography of the commons that makes visible community and commons processes; it will require a shift in strategy from explicating and defending existing commons to mapping spaces into which a commons future might be projected. The Buffalo Commons and a map-based project in New England fisheries link new spatial imaginaries with desires for and enactments of alternative economic initiatives. Each project rereads economic and environmental processes relative to the potential of the commons rather than the potential of capitalism.
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Suggested citation
St. Martin, K. 2009. "Toward a Cartography of the Commons: Constituting the Political and Economic Possibilities of Place." Professional Geographer 61(4): 493-507.