TRACK 1 (INDIGO): IN THE FUTURE THE LANDED COMMONS MUST PREVAIL
Session 1.1 : Theoretical Approaches to Landed Commons.
How to de-marginalize commons for de-commodificaton as a legal concept?
Ide Hiergens
PhD-researcher INDIGO
UAntwerpen, KULeuven
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TRACK 1 (INDIGO): IN THE FUTURE THE LANDED COMMONS MUST PREVAIL
Session 1.3. (Un-)intended outcomes of commoning practices in urban settings
Chris Kesteloot
Division of Geography and Tourism
Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences
Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
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TRACK 1 (INDIGO): IN THE FUTURE THE LANDED COMMONS MUST PREVAIL
Session 1.3. (Un-)intended outcomes of commoning practices in urban settings
Active Neighbourhood Communities for Urban Commons’ Care
Social Street, Living Street and Future Street
Giulia Ganugi
PhD in Sociology and Social Research
University of Bologna
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TRACK 1 (INDIGO): IN THE FUTURE THE LANDED COMMONS MUST PREVAIL
Session 1.2. (Un-)intended outcomes of commoning practices in open space
Hans Leinfelder
KU Leuven
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TRACK 1 (INDIGO): IN THE FUTURE THE LANDED COMMONS MUST PREVAIL
Session 1.3. (Un-)intended outcomes of commoning practices in urban settings
Nele Verdonck, urban planner - architect and Clenn Kustermans, urban planner
OMGEVING cvba
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TRACK 3 : IN THE FUTURE ACTION RESEARCH WILL GO UNDERGROUND?
Session 3.1 OBJECTS OF POLICY, SUBJECTS OF POLITICS
Framing Social Movements in the Post-‐Colonial Global South
The workshop organiser:
Prathiwi W. Putri
Post Doc, Rule and Rupture Programme
Department of Food and Resource Economics (IFRO), Copenhagen University
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A central aim of this workshop is to re-‐contextualise the analytical features of Social Innovation (SI) and territorial development (Moulaert & Leontidou, 1994; Moulaert et al., 2001; Moulaert & Nussbaumer, 2005; Moulaert, 2009; Moulaert et al., 2010; Moulaert & Jessop, 2013) within the post-‐colonial Global South. The works on Social Innovation examines the roles of place-‐based and multiscale-‐connected governance structures that involve different forms of collective actions within or outside the spheres of state and market (Moulaert, 2009, 2010). The theoretical endeavours of SI seek to provide explanatory as well as normative frameworks, and especially for the latter SI stresses on two pillars of sustained and meaningful local development: institutional innovation and socio-‐economic innovation, i.e. the satisfaction of various basic needs of local communities (Moulaert & Nussbaumer, 2005; Moulaert et al., 2010). Institutional innovation includes creations of channels for cultural emancipation, interpersonal and intergroup communications, also people’s preferences within decision-‐making mechanisms (Moulaert & Nussbaumer, 2005). With both interrelated innovation approaches to development, SI seeks to link short-‐ and long-‐term community needs along with the efforts to influence the policy making at the greater urban scale.
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