What are our principles?

A new world has emerged through the crisis and has turned in recent years towards production based on the commons and social and solidarity economy. Faced with the deadlocked financial-centered system, it opposes a new anthropocentric system of values, which puts forth:

* cooperation rather than competition, * sharing and reciprocity, instead of exclusion, * sharing skills for the common benefit instead of individualism, * solidarity instead of indifference and isolationism, * active participation in collective decisions rather than acceptance of a future that others make for us, * ecological value and sustainability rather than overexploitation and depletion of natural resources, * self-management, autonomy and self-sufficiency. * Fair trade without intermediaries and the solidarity market. * the defense of the commons against enclosures and their promotion as a basis for a development of human, nature and economy.

These principles, along with others that will emerge from practicing the commons in the future, are perhaps more important than the resources themselves which we are called upon to produce and manage together. In this sense, the commons are not just social relationships around resources. They are also a new ethos and a political momentum that stems from our active participation in the economy of the common people, and with the intention of transforming the entire society.