Commons Organizing: Embedding Common Good and Institutions for Collective Action. Insights from Ethics and Economics
Keywords: 
Common good
Commons
Institutions for collective action
Commons organizing
Commoning
Subsidiarity
Polycentricity
Community-based enterprise
Issue Date: 
2020
ISSN: 
0167-4544
Note: 
This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
Citation: 
Albareda, L. (Laura); Sison, A.J. (Alejo José). "Commons Organizing: Embedding Common Good and Institutions for Collective Action. Insights from Ethics and Economics". Journal of Business Ethics. 166, 2020, 727 - 743
Abstract
In recent years, business ethics and economic scholars have been paying greater attention to the development of commons organizing. The latter refers to the processes by which communities of people work in common in the pursuit of the common good. In turn, this promotes commons organizational designs based on collective forms of common goods production, distribution, management and ownership. In this paper, we build on two main literature streams: (1) the ethical approach based on the theory of the common good of the frm in virtue ethics and (2) the economic approach based on the theory of institutions for collective action developed by Ostrom’s research on common-pool resources to avert the tragedy of the commons. The latter expands to include the novel concepts of new commons, “commoning” and polycentric governance. Drawing on the analysis of what is new in these forms of organizing, we propose a comprehensive model, highlighting the integration of two sets of organizing principles—common good and collective action – and fve problem-solving processes to explain the main dimensions of commons organizing. We contribute to business ethics literature by exploring the convergence between the ethical and economic approaches in the development of a commons organizing view.

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