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Commons

Commons refers to resources that are shared and managed collectively by a community rather than owned privately or controlled solely by the state. It encompasses natural resources such as pastures, fisheries, forests, air, and water; as well as knowledge and cultural resources such as open data, public-domain works, open-source software, and Creative Commons–licensed materials. The central idea is to maintain access and sustainable use through rules and norms created by the users themselves or by the communities that rely on the resources.

Historically, common-pool resources have faced the risk of overuse, a concern highlighted in discussions of the

In the digital age, the concept expanded to the digital commons, including collaborative projects like Wikipedia,

Challenges and debates surround the commons, including questions about scalability, enforcement, and the balance between openness

“tragedy
of
the
commons.”
Subsequent
work,
notably
by
Elinor
Ostrom,
showed
that
local
governance
can
sustain
commons
when
institutions
implement
design
principles
such
as
clearly
defined
boundaries,
congruence
between
rules
and
local
conditions,
collective-choice
arrangements,
monitoring,
graduated
sanctions,
accessible
dispute
resolution,
recognition
of
the
rights
to
organize,
and
nested
enterprises
for
larger
systems.
open-source
software,
open
data,
and
widely
available
creative
works.
Scholars
such
as
Yochai
Benkler
describe
this
as
commons-based
peer
production,
a
mode
of
collaboration
that
relies
on
voluntary
cooperation
and
shared
resources
rather
than
traditional
market
transactions.
and
control.
Advocates
argue
that
well-governed
commons
can
promote
sustainability,
equity,
and
innovation,
while
critics
caution
against
overuse
or
insufficient
protection
of
individual
rights.
The
concept
remains
a
central
lens
in
discussions
of
environmental
policy,
information
governance,
and
collaborative
production.