The following comes from a short but extremely useful thought piece sent to us by Stefan Meretz and Silke Helfrich that describes what a commons is relative to other types of goods. The infographic is nearly self-explanatory, though if you'd like each part of it explained in more detail, go here for the English version and here for the German version.

What's significant about the piece is that it puts social production in a scheme - and on the same plane - with market production. Economics has focused on markets and commodities, though with thought pieces like this and the work of Elinor Ostrom, recent winner of a Nobel Prize for her scientific study of commons, this may be changing.
The other cool part of it, from a shareable design perspective, is that understanding the qualities of different types of goods can help those who want to design products for shareability. As we're learning on Shareable, some things are shareable, some things not so much.
One point of difference with the thought piece is the idea that commodities and commons are at odds. I would agree that in most cases they are - as when commons get overexploited to serve a commodities market - though I suspect there are cases where markets, commodities, and commons are complementary. One such possible case is described in the book Resilience Thinking. It offers the example of the Helge river delta in Sweden where a certain level of livestock grazing is positive for the entire ecosystem. In this case, the commons supports the milk and beef commodity markets and the entire ecosystem gets supported in return by an optimal level of grazing.
Any other examples where commons and commodity markets might be complementary? Or have another perspective? Would love to hear your comments.
Thumbnail courtesy of Guillermo Fdez on Flickr.
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Comments
Neils, sorry I botched the name! And thanks for correcting me and sharing more about the area. I made the correction in the article.
The book Resilience Thinking has five cases, the Helge river was a fascinating case to me because of how human and natural systems benefit each other there and because of the rich history of the area.
Neal
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The Swedish river that you refer to is called "Helge" - meaning "holy" the "a" in the end is actually an "Ã¥" - meaning "small/midsize river"
Helge Ã… is the main water stream in the UNESCO biosphere area Vattenriket Kristianstad (town founded by king Christian IV of Denmark). More resilience publications about the area can be found here: http://www.stockholmresilience.org/contactus/staff/schultz/publications....
Pics:
http://images.google.com/images?q=helge%20%C3%A5&oe=utf-8&rls=org.mozill...
Ostroms Nobel lecture in Stockholm in December:
http://nobelprize.org/mediaplayer/index.php?id=1223