2020
DOI: 10.1080/07352166.2020.1851139
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Commoning toward urban resilience: The role of trust, social cohesion, and involvement in a simulated urban commons setting

Abstract: In this paper, we investigate the potential of urban commons for building community resilience. We focus on the issue of adaptability to socio-ecological issues, which depends on the social capital built by the local community of practice. We measure this capital through the variables of volunteer involvement, perceived trust, and social cohesion in an agent-based model, which simulates the dynamics of participation in collective activities. We anchor our model with the case of KasKantine in Amsterdam, a coope… Show more

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Cited by 24 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…They are not simply a means for stakeholders to advocate their own interests, a common challenge in collaborative governance. 42,43 This framing of the process increases the likelihood that future collaborations to address salinization in the Occoquan will be successful, [44][45][46][47] but does not guarantee it, particularly as the focus of such collaborations broadens to include the sewershed, which is both more contested and brings new groups of stakeholders to the table.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They are not simply a means for stakeholders to advocate their own interests, a common challenge in collaborative governance. 42,43 This framing of the process increases the likelihood that future collaborations to address salinization in the Occoquan will be successful, [44][45][46][47] but does not guarantee it, particularly as the focus of such collaborations broadens to include the sewershed, which is both more contested and brings new groups of stakeholders to the table.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As pointed out above, trust-building is an essential characteristic of well-functioning common property systems. As empirical research suggests (Feinberg et al, 2020;Rogge et al, 2018), smaller group sizes are more likely to sustain trust and social cohesion. This, perhaps, also indicates that the "community" to start with should not be too big and involve too many stakeholders, also taking into consideration Ostrom's critical design principle of having welldemarcated resource areas to be governed and/or managed.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Perhaps the most important contribution of urban commons is as a self-governance framework that centers the preservation of urban ecosystems (and their multiple benefits) as integral parts of neighborhoods rather than an afterthought of land use planning (Colding and Barthel, 2013; Mundoli et al, 2017). Urban commons therefore enables and cultivates socio-spatially contextualized resilience amidst overly restrictive and oftentimes irrelevant government plans about urban space and its uses (Feinberg et al, 2020).…”
Section: Examining Institutional Design At the Interface Of Technolog...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Key promises of urban commoning and commons include: the amelioration of the mismatch between the top-down planning (and design and management) of urban spaces and the actual needs and capacities of its users (Bradley, 2015;Huron, 2017;Linebaugh, 2008;Stavrides, 2016) and, as a result, the cultivation of local social capital for locally relevant and inclusive resilience (Petrescu et al, 2016). This largely bottom-up adaptive governance process that increases social capital and enables communities to develop resilience based on their own capacities, values, meanings, and social-spatial dynamics (Feinberg et al, 2020). Perhaps the most important contribution of urban commons is as a self-governance framework that centers the preservation of urban ecosystems (and their multiple benefits) as integral parts of neighborhoods rather than an afterthought of land use planning (Colding and Barthel, 2013;Mundoli et al, 2017).…”
Section: Examining Institutional Design At the Interface Of Technolog...mentioning
confidence: 99%