FYI
---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Jennifer Baek baek01@gmail.com Date: Thu, Sep 13, 2012 at 6:13 PM Subject: [FC-discuss] Awesome event: Steven Johnson on the Rise of the "Peer Progressive" To: Discussion of Free Culture in general and this organization in particular discuss@freeculture.org, SFC Core core@freeculture.org
Hey all,
I wanted to share with/invite all of you to an awesome event happening at New York Law School, put on by Personal Democracy Media and the Institute of Information Law and Policy. This is a great opportunity to hear luminaries speak about the rise of peer-to-peer collaborative culture as an impetus for achieving real social progress! But rather than me telling you what it's going to be about, I'm including a blurb about the event in this e-mail (see below).
*REGISTER HEREhttp://personaldemocracy.com/event/special-book-event-steven-johnson-rise-peer-progressive .*
*Students go for FREE. Enter Discount Code: NYLAW12*
*Location: New York Law School, 185 West Broadway, New York, NY 10013*
*Date: Monday, 9/24/12*
*Time: 7:30PM*
I hope to see fellow SFC-ers there, and would love it if we could talk/hang afterwards.
Cheers,
Jennifer -- Book Event: Steven Johnson on the Rise of the "Peer Progressive"Monday, September 24 - 7:30pm - New York Law School
Is there a new political philosophy emerging from things like open source software development; massive community sharing hubs like Wikipedia, Kickstarter, and Reddit; peer-to-peer social networking; experiments in "Liquid Democracy," and the rapid spread of resource sharing tools like ZipCar, AirBnb and Car2go? Is it time to start talking about replacing the "welfare state" with the "partner state"?
*On Monday September 24 at 7:30pm at the New York Law School*, we're looking forward to exploring all those questions and more with noted author Steven Johnson, whose new book *Future, Perfect*http://www.stevenberlinjohnson.com/2012/07/introducing-future-perfect.htmlis must-reading for people who believe in the power of open, collaborative peer-to-peer networking to achieve real social progress.
Johnson argues for a new breed of political beast: the "peer progressive." You may be one if you're wary of centralized control, whether that's in the hands of Big Government or Big Corporations or Big Labor, but you're not a free-market libertarian either because you believe that markets frequently fail to provide essential social goods. Peer progressives, Johnson argues, think the way the Internet itself works--nobody owns it, everyone can connect to it, anyone can improve on it--might offer a model for solving other problems. And they're struck by how voluntary associations that are organized non-hierarchically for non-financial goals like love, or social solidarity, or a shared passion (like Wikipedia) can scale to the size of millions of participants.
Additional speakers contributing to the conversation include:
- *Beth Noveck*, NY Law School Professor and served in the White House as the first United States Deputy Chief Technology Officer and founder and director of the White House Open Government Initiative - *Tina Rosenberg*, co-writer of the Fixes column at the New York Times online, and author of *Join the Club: How Peer Pressure Can Transform the World* and the e-book *D for Deception* - *Clay Shirky*, NYU Professor of Interactive Telecommunications, and author of three books on social media: *Cognitive Surplus* (2010), *Here Comes Everybody* (2008), and *Voices from the Net* (1994)
Moderated by *Micah L. Sifry*, PDM co-founder and editorial director.
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