COMMONS MAGAZINE

Photo by Dan Burden/Blue Zones

Walking Picks Up Speed

November 11, 2016

As life grows ever more challenging, with concerns about health and the future nagging at us, one solution can be as simple as taking a walk.

Kids walking to school in Riceville, Iowa

America’s Walking Renaissance

November 11, 2016 | By Jay Walljasper

Get a free pdf download of a new book detailing the best tips and strategies to help Americans walk more, and highlighting unexpected success stories across the country. The book chronicles how the walking movement is gaining ground all across the country—in suburbs and small towns as well as big cities and college towns:

By Victor Bautista under a Creative Commons license

First Step Toward Reconnecting a Fractured Country

November 11, 2016 | By Jay Walljasper

The recent election spotlights how fractured America has become. Thankfully, walking offers one simple way to connect with one another.  Sidewalks, streets, trails and other places we travel on foot are common ground—literally, commons we all share.  They are among the few places where Americans of many backgrounds come together face-to-face, giving us the chance to smile, wave, talk and get to know someone different than ourselves. It is much harder to fear, hate, dismiss or ignore people you cross paths with every day.

By Victor Bautista under a Creative Commons license

First Step Toward Connecting a Fractured Country

November 11, 2016 | By Jay Walljasper

The recent election spotlights how fractured America has become. Thankfully, walking offers one simple way to connect with one another.  Sidewalks, streets, trails and other places we travel on foot are common ground—literally, commons we all share.  They are among the few places where Americans of many backgrounds come together face-to-face, giving us the chance to smile, wave, talk and get to know someone different than ourselves. It is much harder to fear, hate, dismiss or ignore people you cross paths with every day.

A student skateboards to school on the Indianapolis Cultural Trail (By Sciondriver under a Creative Commons license)

Indy Rocks: An Overlooked City Bounces Back

September 28, 2016 | By Jay Walljasper

Indianapolis is not yet a city people add to their bucket lists or dream about moving. It’s generally seen as a good town to raise a family or find a job—a sensible, comfortable, but not exactly exciting or exceptional place. But after a weeklong visit--where I sampled everything from world-class arts institutions to working-class taverns, I came away distinctly surprised and impressed.

By Michael Geminder under a Creative Commons licesne

The Greening of the Commons

September 28, 2016

The places we all share – the commons – vary in many ways.  Some are busy places; some are quiet.  Some are designed as pass-through places; others invite us to stay awhile.  They all are important to our lives. Now new research shows that green, natural spaces—including playgrounds, learning environments, neighborhoods, even exercise environments— offer particular health and well-being benefits. 

•Workplaces 

A Great Lakes Commons Journey

August 17, 2016 | By Jay Walljasper

The Great Lakes Commons has launched Great Lakes Journeys, an initiative to celebrate this unparalleled commons through public performances and events.  They’ve just published a handbook, Great Lakes Commons Journey, to guide you on your own adventures. You can download a free PDF here.

Duluth is the next stop, August 20 through September 11.  Here’s what’s in store:

August 20:

There's One Overwhelming Issue in This Election

August 14, 2016 | By David Bollier

Many progressives disagree with Hillary Clinton on a number of issues, in some cases intensely.  But there is one overarching reason we should all be vigorously supporting her election:  The future of the Supreme Court is at stake.

We Were Born Right Now for a Reason

August 14, 2016

“It’s time to talk about the weather. We in trouble friends. Storm clouds are coming in,” chant poets and performers Alix Garcia and Naima Penniman in the opening of their video “When the Last Tree Stands Alone”.  Known collectively as Climbing PoeTree—a spoken-word, hip hop, multimedia duo—Garcia and Penniman eloquently activate an alarm about climate disruption, and then rouse us all to do something about it.

Photo by Dan Burden

America's Walking Renaissance

August 14, 2016 | By Jay Walljasper

Imagine living in one the world's great walking communities.

Your day begins with a stroll—saying hi to neighbors, noticing blooming gardens and enticing shop windows, maybe stopping for a treat on your way to work. 

Weekends are even better.  You step out your door and join the hum of activity on the sidewalk en route to a coffeeshop, park, shopping district, friend’s home, recreation center or house of worship. 

Every American Deserves a Guaranteed Minimum Income

August 14, 2016

 

Rent isn't talked about much in polite society; it’s the 800-pound gorilla everyone pretends isn’t there. Economists in particular rarely mention it, not out of ignorance but because they find it awkward to offend those who collect it disproportionately. The time has come, though, to bring rent out of the closet, for it holds the key to saving both our middle class and planet.

Piada 52 is cooperative cafe in Forli, Italy, hiring unemployed kids, which has helped rivitalize a park once known for drug dealing.  

An Overlooked Element of the Good Life in Italy (and Everywhere)

August 14, 2016 | By Jay Walljasper

There’s a big secret in the global economy, which the powers that be hope we continue to overlook: cooperatives. 

In most Americans’ minds, coops are an admirable but inconsequential business sector.  The place where idealistic shoppers go to score locally-brewed kombucha and fair-trade quinoa. Or maybe where their great-grandparents sold farm commodities during the hard times of the Depression. 

The Tanka staff are now co-owners of the company.  (Photo by Katie Hunter)

Healthy Snack Generates Hope & Income on Pine Ridge Reservation

August 14, 2016 | By Jay Walljasper

The Pine Ridge Indian reservation is not the first place you’d look for good news about creating a new kind of economy that works for everyone. 

This corner of South Dakota includes several of the poorest counties in America, according to census figures. Ninety-seven percent of Pine Ridge’s Lakota Indian population lives below the federal poverty line, reports the American Indian Humanitarian Foundation.  The unemployment rate is well over 50 percent.

The farmer's market in New Rochelle, New York.  (Photo by Project for Public Spaces)

19 Ways to Make Your Community Great

August 14, 2016 | By Jay Walljasper

The disaster with Flint, Michigan’s drinking water, incited by political leaders more devoted to fiscal austerity than the common good, illuminates why it’s important to think of our communities as commons, which belong to all residents not just the wealthy and politically powerful. 

The commons means the many things we share together rather than own privately--a list that starts with air, water, parks and streets and expands to include more complex entities such as the Internet, civic organizations and entire communities.    

Photo by Gage Skidmore under a Creative Commons license.  

What Should Bernie Do Now?

May 20, 2016 | By David Morris

“What should Bernie do?” That seems to be the question of the month. Permit me to weigh in.

Here’s what we know at this point in the campaign.

For Sanders to have any chance of winning the support of superdelegates he must arrive at the convention with more elected delegates than Hillary.   To do that he needs to win about 65 percent of all elected delegates in the remaining electoral contests.

Illustration by DonkeyHotey under a Creative Commons license.

A Sterling Example of Democracy in Action

April 9, 2016 | By David Morris

Win or lose, Bernie Sanders has made this Democratic primary the most substantive in my lifetime.  Not that Hillary Clinton’s campaign is devoid of ideas.  She has some thoughtful ones. But the boldness of Sanders’ proposals is what has driven this historic and instructive debate.  

The dynamic so far consists of Sanders setting a marker (e.g. free tuition, universal free health care, breaking up the banks, a $15 federal minimum wage, a $1 trillion public works investment); Clinton responds, and their two camps engage in a spirited, intelligent, and surprisingly concrete debate.

How One State Escaped Rule by Wall Street

March 28, 2016

Across the country, people are suffering the consequences of a banking system that’s dominated by a handful of giant banks. Local businesses can’t get the credit they need to grow. College graduates are stumbling under the weight of student debt with sky-high interest rates. Neighborhoods are being stripped of their assets through predatory mortgages and consumer loans.

The Art of the Wild

March 28, 2016

Can we truly know wilderness?  The word itself defies constraint, and contains multiple meanings. “An uncultivated and uninhabited region,” “an empty or pathless area,” and “a confusing multitude” are but a few definitions of wilderness, all of which indicate humans’ complex and changeable relationship to nature.

A screen shot from the movie Norma Rae. 

Norma Rae Is Spinning in Her Grave

March 28, 2016

In 1973, Crystal Lee Sutton, a single mom working in a textile mill in Roanoke Rapids, North Carolina, was struggling to get by.  The working conditions at the J.P.

Arise! Arise!

March 28, 2016

Arise!  Arise!

See Jean Rohe perform her alternative national anthem here.

Nobody Told Me to Dance