Values of Commons and Capital

  • Europe

All these measurements seek to aid the economy in the production and predictions of growth – which is to say the creative ‘production of sameness’0. In this context, of competition, fragmentation, the auto-cannibalistic ouroboros of capitalist production – knowledge is power, or rather the pursuit of power, and power is a ‘conception…of the desirable0’; the baseline value by which all economic activity measures itself. In turn, economic valuation becomes a process of measurement based on the abstraction of the unquantifiable into a perfect field. It is the flattening and universalising of all things made available to exchange projected into a ‘future that never arrives0’.

The implication is that knowledge and value co-constitute each other. Choices are made about what is to be valued – ‘…what is to be counted, visible and present’ – what knowledges have the time and space to be excavated and cared for. In turn, what is already known influences these choices about what is to be valued.

The arrangement of knowledge and value in relation to one another is not as monolithic structures but dynamic processes which must be understood in terms relevant to their social context.

(1)

Black, Hannah, ‘Value, measure, love’, The New Inquiry: July 30th, 2012 < https://thenewinquiry.com/value-measure-love/> [Accessed: May 20th, 2021]

(2)

Robbins, Joel, Sommershuh, Julian, ‘Values’, The Cambridge Encyclopaedia of Anthropology: 1st September, 2016 < https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/values> [Accessed: 12th March, 2022]

(3)

Black, Hannah, ‘Value, measure, love’, The New Inquiry, 2012

Rebecca Gill

Rebecca is a social researcher and writer. They graduated from Glasgow School of Art in 2019 and have since been working in the third sector.