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Commonspoly

Join Stacco Troncoso, Ann Marie Utratel and Ruth Catlow to play Commonspoly - the resource-access game where we win by working as a community.

What to expect

Commonspoly is a hack and a critique of the game Monopoly. Players aim first to re-municipalize private goods and then turn them into a Commons - you'll learn why this is the best strategy while playing the game.

Rather than compete against each other, players must overcome their conditioning and ‘rational, self-interest' to instead maximize cooperative behaviours and create a commons-oriented locality. Who wins? Everyone in the community! Unless the speculators take over...which we must fight at all costs. United we stand!

This event forms part of Convivial Tools, a programme of talks, debates and workshops exploring new strategies for a more cooperative society, based on the thinking of the late philosopher Ivan Illich.

Booking information

Adult: £10

Student/Concession: £5

Members: £7

Coordinators

Stacco Troncoso

Stacco Troncoso is the advocacy coordinator for Commons Transition and the P2P Foundation, and a co-founder of the Guerrilla Translation collective. He is the designer and content editor for CommonsTransition.org, the P2P Foundation blog and the Commons Strategies Group website.

Ann Marie Utratel

Ann Marie Utratel is part of the Commons Transition team, and is a co-founder of the Guerrilla Translation collective. Her work helps connect a widening network of people involved in forward-thinking communities including the Commons and P2P movement, collaborative economy, open licensing, open culture, open cooperativism, and beyond.

Ruth Catlow

Artist and curator, co-founder and co-director of Furtherfield, Ruth Catlow is a recovering web-utopian and has worked since the mid-90s with network practices in arts, technology and social change. www.furtherfield.org www.ruthcatlow.net

Related event

Convivial Tools

Convivial Tools is a programme of talks, debates and workshops exploring new approaches for a more cooperative society, based on the thinking of the late philosopher Ivan Illich.