Beating the bounds: how does ‘open source’ become a seed commons?

peter.suber's bookmarks 2020-10-10

Summary:

Abstract:  In response to ongoing plant genetic enclosures, the Open Source Seed Initiative (OSSI) is creating a ‘protected commons’ for seed. It is a project, I argue, that reflects characteristics of a growing transnational commoning movement. From the Zapatistas to seed wars, such movements draw attention to commons not simply as a resource, but as a dynamic and evolving social activity: commoning. In the US, OSSI includes 38 plant breeders, 48 seed companies and 377 crop varieties. Yet challenges remain for OSSI to gain wider legitimacy for ‘freed seed’, to build trust in a moral pledge, and to establish fair guidelines for which people and which seed can participate in making the commons. Using the metaphor of ‘beating the bounds’ – a feudal practice of contesting enclosures – I ask how OSSI defends the commons in intersecting arenas. The first way is legal, as OSSI negotiates a move from contract law toward moral economy law. Next is epistemic, as an informal breeder network revitalizes farmer knowledge, while proving more structurally able and culturally equipped to lead commoning efforts. Finally, I reflect on the nature of boundary beating itself, aided by Global South movements. Seed sovereignty perspectives suggest room for a pluriverse of commons to grow.

Link:

http://food.berkeley.edu/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/Beating-the-bounds-how-does-open-source-become-a-seed-commons.pdf

Updated:

10/10/2020, 06:09

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » peter.suber's bookmarks

Tags:

oa.biology oa.agriculture oa.commons oa.floss oa.south

Date tagged:

10/10/2020, 10:09

Date published:

10/25/2017, 06:09