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Wikipedia

Gift economy

A gift economy or gift culture is a system of exchange where valuables are not sold, but rather given without an explicit agreement for immediate or future rewards.[1] Social norms and customs govern giving a gift in a gift culture; although there is some expectation of reciprocity, gifts are not given in an explicit exchange of goods or services for money, or some other commodity or service.[2] This contrasts with a barter economy or a market economy, where goods and services are primarily explicitly exchanged for value received.

The nature of gift economies is the subject of a foundational debate in anthropology. Anthropological research into gift economies began with Bronisław Malinowski's description of the Kula ring[3] in the Trobriand Islands during World War I.[4] The Kula trade appeared to be gift-like since Trobrianders would travel great distances over dangerous seas to give what were considered valuable objects without any guarantee of a return. Malinowski's debate with the French anthropologist Marcel Mauss quickly established the complexity of "gift exchange" and introduced a series of technical terms such as reciprocity, inalienable possessions, and presentation to distinguish between the different forms of exchange.[5][6]

According to anthropologists Maurice Bloch and Jonathan Parry, it is the unsettled relationship between market and non-market exchange that attracts the most attention. Some authors argue that gift economies build community,[7] while markets harm community relationships.[8]

Gift exchange is distinguished from other forms of exchange by a number of principles, such as the form of property rights governing the articles exchanged; whether gifting forms a distinct "sphere of exchange" that can be characterized as an "economic system"; and the character of the social relationship that the gift exchange establishes. Gift ideology in highly commercialized societies differs from the "prestations" typical of non-market societies. Gift economies also differ from related phenomena, such as common property regimes and the exchange of non-commodified labour.

Principles of gift exchange edit

According to anthropologist Jonathan Parry, discussion on the nature of gifts, and of a separate sphere of gift exchange that would constitute an economic system, has been plagued by the ethnocentric use of a modern, western, market society-based conception of the gift applied as if it were a universal across culture and time. However, he claims that anthropologists, through analysis of a variety of cultural and historical forms of exchange, have established that no universal practice exists.[9] Similarly, the idea of a pure gift is "most likely to arise in highly differentiated societies with an advanced division of labour and a significant commercial sector" and need to be distinguished from non-market "prestations".[10] According to Weiner, to speak of a gift economy in a non-market society is to ignore the distinctive features of their exchange relationships, as the early classic debate between Bronislaw Malinowski and Marcel Mauss demonstrated.[5][6] Gift exchange is frequently "embedded" in political, kin, or religious institutions, and therefore does not constitute an economic system per se.[11]

Property and alienability edit

Gift-giving is a form of transfer of property rights over particular objects. The nature of those property rights varies from society to society, from culture to culture. They are not universal. The nature of gift-giving is thus altered by the type of property regime in place.[12]

Property is not a thing, but a relationship amongst people about things.[13] It is a social relationship that governs the conduct of people with respect to the use and disposition of things. Anthropologists analyze these relationships in terms of a variety of actors' (individual or corporate) bundle of rights over objects.[12] An example is the current debates around intellectual property rights.[14][15][16][17] Take a purchased book over which the author retains a copyright. Although the book is a commodity, bought and sold, it has not been completely alienated from its creator, who maintains a hold over it; the owner of the book is limited in what he can do with the book by the rights of the creator.[18][19] Weiner has argued that the ability to give while retaining a right to the gift/commodity is a critical feature of the gifting cultures described by Malinowski and Mauss, and explains, for example, why some gifts such as Kula valuables return to their original owners after an incredible journey around the Trobriand islands. The gifts given in Kula exchange still remain, in some respects, the property of the giver.[6]

In the example used above, copyright is one of those bundled rights that regulate the use and disposition of a book. Gift-giving in many societies is complicated because private property owned by an individual may be quite limited in scope (see § The commons below).[12] Productive resources, such as land, may be held by members of a corporate group (such as a lineage), but only some members of that group may have use rights. When many people hold rights over the same objects, gifting has very different implications than the gifting of private property; only some of the rights in that object may be transferred, leaving that object still tied to its corporate owners. As such, these types of objects are inalienable possessions, simultaneously kept while given.[6]

Gift versus prestation edit

 
A Kula necklace, with its distinctive red shell-disc beads, from the Trobriand Islands

Malinowski's study of the Kula ring[20] became the subject of debate with the French anthropologist, Marcel Mauss, author of "The Gift" ("Essai sur le don", 1925).[5] Parry argued that Malinowski emphasized the exchange of goods between individuals, and their selfish motives for gifting: they expected a return of equal or greater value. Malinowski argued that reciprocity is an implicit part of gifting, that there is no gift free of expectation.[21]

In contrast, Mauss emphasized that the gifts were not between individuals, but between representatives of larger collectives. These gifts were a total prestation, a service provided out of obligation, like community service.[22] They were not alienable commodities to be bought and sold, but, like crown jewels, embodied the reputation, history and identity of a "corporate kin group", such as a line of kings. Given the stakes, Mauss asked "why anyone would give them away?" His answer was an enigmatic concept, the spirit of the gift. Parry believes that much of the confusion (and resulting debate) was due to a bad translation. Mauss appeared to be arguing that a return gift is given to maintain the relationship between givers; a failure to return a gift ends the relationship and the promise of any future gifts.

Both Malinowski and Mauss agreed that in non-market societies, where there was no clear institutionalized economic exchange system, gift/prestation exchange served economic, kinship, religious and political functions that could not be clearly distinguished from each other, and which mutually influenced the nature of the practice.[21]

Inalienable possessions edit

 
Watercolor by James G. Swan depicting the Klallam people of chief Chetzemoka at Port Townsend, with one of Chetzemoka's wives distributing potlatch

The concept of total prestations was further developed by Annette Weiner, who revisited Malinowski's fieldsite in the Trobriand Islands. Her critique was twofold. First, Trobriand Island society is matrilineal, and women hold much economic and political power, but their exchanges were ignored by Malinowski. Secondly, she developed Mauss' argument about reciprocity and the "spirit of the gift" in terms of "inalienable possessions: the paradox of keeping while giving".[6] Weiner contrasted moveable goods, which can be exchanged, with immoveable goods that serve to draw the gifts back (in the Trobriand case, male Kula gifts with women's landed property). The goods given on the islands are so linked to particular groups that even when given away, they are not truly alienated. Such goods depend on the existence of particular kinds of kinship groups in society.

French anthropologist Maurice Godelier[23] continued this analysis in The Enigma of the Gift (1999). Albert Schrauwers argued that the kinds of societies used as examples by Weiner and Godelier (including the Kula ring in the Trobriands, the Potlatch of the indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest Coast, and the Toraja of South Sulawesi, Indonesia) are all characterized by ranked aristocratic kin groups that fit Claude Lévi-Strauss' model of House Societies (where house refers to both noble lineage and their landed estate). Total prestations are given to preserve landed estates identified with particular kin groups and maintain their place in a ranked society.[24]

Reciprocity and the spirit of the gift edit

Chris Gregory argued that reciprocity is a dyadic exchange relationship that we characterize, imprecisely, as gift-giving. Gregory argued that one gives gifts to friends and potential enemies in order to establish a relationship, by placing them in debt. He also claimed that in order for such a relationship to persist, there must be a time lag between the gift and counter-gift; one or the other partner must always be in debt. Marshall Sahlins gave birthday gifts as an example. They are separated in time so that one partner feels the obligation to make a return gift. To forget the return gift may be enough to end the relationship. Gregory stated that without a relationship of debt, there is no reciprocity, and that this is what distinguishes a gift economy from a true gift, given with no expectation of return (something Sahlins generalised reciprocity; see below).[25]

Marshall Sahlins, an American cultural anthropologist, identified three main types of reciprocity in his book Stone Age Economics (1972). Gift or generalized reciprocity is the exchange of goods and services without keeping track of their exact value, but often with the expectation that their value will balance out over time. Balanced or Symmetrical reciprocity occurs when someone gives to someone else, expecting a fair and tangible return at a specified amount, time, and place. Market or negative reciprocity is the exchange of goods and services where each party intends to profit from the exchange, often at the expense of the other. Gift economies, or generalized reciprocity, occurred within closely knit kin groups, and the more distant the exchange partner, the more balanced or negative the exchange became.[26]

Charity, debt, and the "poison of the gift" edit

Jonathan Parry argued that ideologies of the "pure gift" are most likely to arise only in highly differentiated societies with an advanced division of labour and a significant commercial sector" and need to be distinguished from the non-market "prestations" discussed above.[10] Parry also underscored, using the example of charitable giving of alms in India (Dāna), that the "pure gift" of alms given with no expectation of return could be "poisonous". That is, the gift of alms embodying the sins of the giver, when given to ritually pure priests, saddled these priests with impurities of which they could not cleanse themselves. "Pure gifts", given without a return, can place recipients in debt, and hence in dependent status: the poison of the gift.[27] David Graeber points out that no reciprocity is expected between unequals: if you make a gift of a dollar to a beggar, he will not give it back the next time you meet. More than likely, he will ask for more, to the detriment of his status.[28] Many who are forced by circumstances to accept charity feel stigmatized. In the Moka exchange system of Papua New Guinea, where gift givers become political "big men", those who are in their debt and unable to repay with "interest" are referred to as "rubbish men".

The French writer Georges Bataille, in La part Maudite, uses Mauss's argument in order to construct a theory of economy: the structure of gift is the presupposition for all possible economy. Bataille is particularly interested in the potlatch as described by Mauss, and claims that its agonistic character obliges the receiver to confirm their own subjection. Thus gifting embodies the Hegelian dipole of master and slave within the act.

Spheres of exchange and "economic systems" edit

The relationship of new market exchange systems to indigenous non-market exchange remained a perplexing question for anthropologists. Paul Bohannan argued that the Tiv of Nigeria had three spheres of exchange, and that only certain kinds of goods could be exchanged in each sphere; each sphere had its own form of special-purpose money. However, the market and universal money allowed goods to be traded between spheres and thus damaged established social relationships.[29] Jonathan Parry and Maurice Bloch argued in "Money and the Morality of Exchange" (1989), that the "transactional order" through which long-term social reproduction of the family occurs has to be preserved as separate from short-term market relations.[30] It is the long-term social reproduction of the family that is sacralized by religious rituals such baptisms, weddings and funerals, and characterized by gifting.

In such situations where gift-giving and market exchange were intersecting for the first time, some anthropologists contrasted them as polar opposites. This opposition was classically expressed by Chris Gregory in his book "Gifts and Commodities" (1982). Gregory argued that:

Commodity exchange is an exchange of alienable objects between people who are in a state of reciprocal independence that establishes a quantitative relationship between the objects exchanged ... Gift exchange is an exchange of inalienable objects between people who are in a state of reciprocal dependence that establishes a qualitative relationship between the transactors (emphasis added).[31]

Gregory contrasts gift and commodity exchange according to five criteria:[32]

Commodity exchange Gift exchange
immediate exchange delayed exchange
alienable goods inalienable goods
actors independent actors dependent
quantitative relationship qualitative relationship
between objects between people

But other anthropologists refused to see these different "exchange spheres" as such polar opposites. Marilyn Strathern, writing on a similar area in Papua New Guinea, dismissed the utility of the contrasting setup in "The Gender of the Gift" (1988).[33]

 
Wedding rings could be considered a commodity, pure gift, or both.

Rather than emphasize how particular kinds of objects are either gifts or commodities to be traded in restricted spheres of exchange, Arjun Appadurai and others began to look at how objects flowed between these spheres of exchange (i.e. how objects can be converted into gifts and then back into commodities). They refocussed attention away from the character of the human relationships formed through exchange, and placed it on "the social life of things" instead. They examined the strategies by which an object could be "singularized" (made unique, special, one-of-a-kind) and so withdrawn from the market. A marriage ceremony that transforms a purchased ring into an irreplaceable family heirloom is one example; the heirloom, in turn, makes a perfect gift. Singularization is the reverse of the seemingly irresistible process of commodification. They thus show how all economies are a constant flow of material objects that enter and leave specific exchange spheres. A similar approach is taken by Nicholas Thomas, who examines the same range of cultures and the anthropologists who write on them, and redirects attention to the "entangled objects" and their roles as both gifts and commodities.[34]

Proscriptions edit

Many societies have strong prohibitions against turning gifts into trade or capital goods. Anthropologist Wendy James writes that among the Uduk people of northeast Africa there is a strong custom that any gift that crosses subclan boundaries must be consumed rather than invested.[35]: 4  For example, an animal given as a gift must be eaten, not bred. However, as in the example of the Trobriand armbands and necklaces, this "perishing" may not consist of consumption as such, but of the gift moving on. In other societies, it is a matter of giving some other gift, either directly in return or to another party. To keep the gift and not give another in exchange is reprehensible. "In folk tales," Lewis Hyde remarks, "the person who tries to hold onto a gift usually dies."[35]: 5 

Daniel Everett, a linguist who studied the small Pirahã tribe of hunter-gatherers in Brazil,[36] reported that, while they are aware of food preservation using drying, salting, and so forth, they reserve their use for items bartered outside the tribe. Within the group, when someone has a successful hunt they immediately share the abundance by inviting others to enjoy a feast. Asked about this practice, one hunter laughed and replied, "I store meat in the belly of my brother."[37][38]

Carol Stack's All Our Kin describes both the positive and negative sides of a network of obligation and gratitude effectively constituting a gift economy. Her narrative of The Flats, a poor Chicago neighborhood, tells in passing the story of two sisters who each came into a small inheritance. One sister hoarded the inheritance and prospered materially for some time, but was alienated from the community. Her marriage broke up, and she integrated herself back into the community largely by giving gifts. The other sister fulfilled the community's expectations, but within six weeks had nothing material to show for the inheritance but a coat and a pair of shoes.[35]: 75–76 

Case studies: prestations edit

Marcel Mauss was careful to distinguish "gift economies" (reciprocity) in market societies from the "total prestations" given in non-market societies. A prestation is a service provided out of obligation, like "community service".[22] These "prestations" bring together domains across political, religious, legal, moral and economic definitions, such that the exchange can be seen to be embedded in non-economic social institutions. These prestations are often competitive, as in the potlatch, Kula exchange, and Moka exchange.[39]

Moka exchange in Papua New Guinea: competitive exchange edit

 
Mount Hagen, Papua New Guinea

The Moka is a highly ritualized system of exchange in the Mount Hagen area of Papua New Guinea, that has become emblematic of the anthropological concepts of a "gift economy" and of a "big man" political system. Moka are reciprocal gifts that raise the social status of the giver if the gift is larger than one that the giver received. Moka refers specifically to the increment in the size of the gift.[40] The gifts are of a limited range of goods, primarily pigs and scarce pearl shells from the coast. To return the same value as one has received in a moka is simply to repay a debt, strict reciprocity. Moka is the extra. To some, this represents interest on an investment. However, one is not bound to provide moka, only to repay the debt. One adds moka to the gift to increase one's prestige, and to place the receiver in debt. It is this constant renewal of the debt relationship which keeps the relationship alive; a debt fully paid off ends further interaction. Giving more than one receives establishes a reputation as a Big man, whereas the simple repayment of debt, or failure to fully repay, pushes one's reputation towards the other end of the scale, "rubbish man".[41] Gift exchange thus has a political effect; granting prestige or status to one, and a sense of debt in the other. A political system can be built out of these kinds of status relationships. Sahlins characterizes the difference between status and rank by highlighting that Big man is not a role; it is a status that is shared by many. The Big man is "not a prince of men", but a "prince among men". The "big man" system is based on the ability to persuade, rather than command.[42]

Toraja funerals: the politics of meat distribution edit

 
Three tongkonan noble houses in a Torajan village
 
Slaughter of swine at a funeral

The Toraja are an ethnic group indigenous to a mountainous region of South Sulawesi, Indonesia.[43] Torajans are renowned for their elaborate funeral rites, burial sites carved into rocky cliffs, and massive peaked-roof traditional houses known as tongkonan which are owned by noble families. Membership in a tongkonan is inherited by all descendants of its founders. Thus any individual may be a member of numerous tongkonan, as long as they contribute to its ritual events. Membership in a tongkonan carries benefits, such as the right to rent some of its rice fields.[44]

Toraja funeral rites are important social events, usually attended by hundreds of people and lasting several days. The funerals are like "big men" competitions where all the descendants of a tongkonan compete through gifts of sacrificial cattle. Participants have invested cattle with others over the years, and draw on those extended networks to make the largest gift. The winner of the competition becomes the new owner of the tongkonan and its rice lands. They display all the cattle horns from their winning sacrifice on a pole in front of the tongkonan.[44]

The Toraja funeral differs from the "big man" system in that the winner of the "gift" exchange gains control of the Tongkonan's property. It creates a clear social hierarchy between the noble owners of the tongkonan and its land, and the commoners who are forced to rent their fields from him. Since the owners of the tongkonan gain rent, they are better able to compete in the funeral gift exchanges, and their social rank is more stable than the "big man" system.[44]

Charity and alms giving edit

Anthropologist David Graeber argued that the great world religious traditions of charity and gift giving emerged almost simultaneously during the "Axial age" (800 to 200 BCE), when coinage was invented and market economies were established on a continental basis. Graeber argues that these charity traditions emerged as a reaction against the nexus formed by coinage, slavery, military violence and the market (a "military-coinage" complex). The new world religions, including Hinduism, Judaism, Buddhism, Confucianism, Christianity, and Islam all sought to preserve "human economies" where money served to cement social relationships rather than purchase things (including people).[45]

Charity and alms-giving are religiously sanctioned voluntary gifts given without expectation of return. However, case studies show that such gifting is not necessarily altruistic.[46]

Merit making in Buddhist Thailand edit

 
Young Burmese monk

Theravada Buddhism in Thailand emphasizes the importance of giving alms (merit making) without any intention of return (a pure gift), which is best accomplished according to doctrine, through gifts to monks and temples. The emphasis is on the selfless gifting which "earns merit" (and a future better life) for the giver rather than on the relief of the poor or the recipient on whom the gift is bestowed. However, Bowie's research shows that this ideal form of gifting is limited to the rich who have the resources to endow temples and sponsor the ordination of monks.[47] Monks come from these same families, so this gifting doctrine has a class element. Poorer farmers place much less emphasis on merit making through gifts to monks and temples. They equally validate gifting to beggars. Poverty and famine is widespread among these poorer groups, and by validating gift-giving to beggars, they are in fact demanding that the rich see to their needs in hard times. Bowie sees this as an example of a moral economy (see below) in which the poor use gossip and reputation to resist elite exploitation and pressure them to ease their "this world" suffering.[48]

Charity: Dana in India edit

Dāna is a form of religious charity given in Hindu India. The gift is said to embody the sins of the giver (the "poison of the gift"), whom it frees of evil by transmitting it to the recipient. The merit of the gift depends on finding a worthy recipient such as a Brahmin priest. Priests are supposed to be able to digest the sin through ritual action and transmit the gift with increment to someone of greater worth. It is imperative that this be a true gift, with no reciprocity, or the evil will return. The gift is not intended to create any relationship between donor and recipient, and there should never be a return gift. Dana thus transgresses the so-called universal "norm of reciprocity".[10]

The Children of Peace in Canada edit

 
Sharon Temple

The Children of Peace (1812–1889) were a utopian Quaker sect. Today, they are primarily remembered for the Sharon Temple, a national historic site and an architectural symbol of their vision of a society based on the values of peace, equality and social justice. They built this ornate temple to raise money for the poor, and built the province of Ontario's first shelter for the homeless. They took a lead role in organizing the province's first co-operative, the Farmers' Storehouse, and opened the province's first credit union. The group soon found that the charity they tried to distribute from their Temple fund endangered the poor. Accepting charity was a sign of indebtedness, and the debtor could be jailed without trial at the time; this was the "poison of the gift". They thus transformed their charity fund into a credit union that loaned small sums like today's micro-credit institutions. This is an example of singularization, as money was transformed into charity in the Temple ceremony, then shifted to an alternative exchange sphere as a loan. Interest on the loan was then singularized, and transformed back into charity.[49]

Gifting as non-commodified exchange in market societies edit

Non-commodified spheres of exchange exist in relation to the market economy. They are created through the processes of singularization as specific objects are de-commodified for a variety of reasons and enter an alternative exchange sphere. It may be in opposition to the market and to its perceived greed. It may also be used by corporations as a means of creating a sense of endebtedness and loyalty in customers. Modern marketing techniques often aim at infusing commodity exchange with features of gift exchange, thus blurring the presumably sharp distinction between gifts and commodities.[50]

Organ transplant networks, sperm and blood banks edit

 
Blood donation poster, WWII

Market economies tend to "reduce everything – including human beings, their labor, and their reproductive capacity – to the status of commodities".[51] "The rapid transfer of organ transplant technology to the third world has created a trade in organs, with sick bodies travelling to the Global South for transplants, and healthy organs from the Global South being transported to the richer Global North, "creating a kind of 'Kula ring' of bodies and body parts."[52] However, all commodities can also be singularized, or de-commodified, and transformed into gifts. In North America, it is illegal to sell organs, and citizens are enjoined to give the "gift of life" and donate their organs in an organ gift economy.[53] However, this gift economy is a "medical realm rife with potent forms of mystified commodification".[54] This multimillion-dollar medical industry requires clients to pay steep fees for the gifted organ, which creates clear class divisions between those who donate (often in the global south) and will never benefit from gifted organs, and those who can pay the fees and thereby receive a gifted organ.[53]

Unlike body organs, blood and semen have been successfully and legally commodified in the United States. Blood and semen can thus be commodified, but once consumed are "the gift of life". Although both can be either donated or sold, are perceived as the "gift of life" yet are stored in "banks", and can be collected only under strict government regulated procedures, recipients very clearly prefer altruistically donated semen and blood. The blood and semen samples with the highest market value are those that have been altruistically donated. The recipients view semen as storing the potential characteristics of their unborn child in its DNA, and value altruism over greed.[55] Similarly, gifted blood is the archetype of a pure gift relationship because the donor is only motivated by a desire to help others.[56][57]

Copyleft vs copyright: the gift of "free" speech edit

Engineers, scientists and software developers have created free software projects such as the Linux kernel and the GNU operating system. They are prototypical examples for the gift economy's prominence in the technology sector, and its active role in instating the use of permissive free software and copyleft licenses, which allow free reuse of software and knowledge. Other examples include file-sharing, open access, unlicensed software and so on.

Points and loyalty programs edit

Many retail organizations have "gift" programs meant to encourage customer loyalty to their establishments. Bird-David and Darr refer to these as hybrid "mass-gifts" which are neither gift nor commodity. They are called mass-gifts because they are given away in large numbers "free with purchase" in a mass-consumption environment. They give as an example two bars of soap in which one is given free with purchase: which is the commodity and which the gift? The mass-gift both affirms the distinct difference between gift and commodity while confusing it at the same time. As with gifting, mass-gifts are used to create a social relationship. Some customers embrace the relationship and gift whereas others reject the gift relationship and interpret the "gift" as a 50% off sale.[58]

Free shops edit

 
Inside Utrecht Giveaway shop. The banner reads "The earth has enough for everyone's need, but not for everyone's greed".

"Give-away shops", "freeshops" or "free stores" are stores where all goods are free. They are similar to charity shops, with mostly second-hand items – only everything is available at no cost. Whether it is a book, a piece of furniture, a garment or a household item, it is all freely given away, although some operate a one-in, one-out–type policy (swap shops). The free store is a form of constructive direct action that provides a shopping alternative to a monetary framework, allowing people to exchange goods and services outside a money-based economy. The anarchist 1960s countercultural group The Diggers[59] opened free stores which gave away their stock, provided free food, distributed free drugs, gave away money, organized free music concerts, and performed works of political art.[60] The Diggers took their name from the original English Diggers led by Gerrard Winstanley[61] and sought to create a mini-society free of money and capitalism.[62]

Burning Man edit

 
Black Rock City, the temporary settlement created in the Nevada Desert for Burning Man, 2010

Burning Man is a week-long annual art and community event held in the Black Rock Desert in northern Nevada, in the United States. The event is described as an experiment in community, radical self-expression, and radical self-reliance. The event forbids commerce (except for ice, coffee, and tickets to the event itself)[63] and encourages gifting.[64] Gifting is one of the 10 guiding principles,[65] as participants to Burning Man (both the desert festival and the year-round global community) are encouraged to rely on a gift economy. The practice of gifting at Burning Man is also documented by the 2002 documentary film Gifting It: A Burning Embrace of Gift Economy,[66] as well as by Making Contact's radio show "How We Survive: The Currency of Giving [encore]".[64]

Cannabis market in the District of Columbia and U.S. states edit

According to the Associated Press, "Gift-giving has long been a part of marijuana culture" and has accompanied legalization in U.S. states in the 2010s.[67] Voters in the District of Columbia legalized the growing of cannabis for personal recreational use by approving Initiative 71 in November 2014, but the 2015 "Cromnibus" Federal appropriations bills prevented the District from creating a system to allow for its commercial sale. Possession, growth, and use of the drug by adults is legal in the District, as is giving it away, but sale and barter of it is not, in effect attempting to create a gift economy.[68] However it ended up creating a commercial market linked to selling other objects.[69] Preceding the January, 2018 legalization of cannabis possession in Vermont without a corresponding legal framework for sales, it was expected that a similar market would emerge there.[70] For a time, people in Portland, Oregon, could only legally obtain cannabis as a gift, which was celebrated in the Burnside Burn rally.[71] For a time, a similar situation ensued after possession was legalized in California, Maine and Massachusetts.[67][72][73]

Related concepts edit

Mutual aid edit

 
The Conquest of Bread by Peter Kropotkin, influential work which presents the economic vision of anarcho-communism

Many anarchists, particularly anarcho-primitivists and anarcho-communists, believe that variations on a gift economy may be the key to breaking the cycle of poverty. Therefore, they often desire to refashion all of society into a gift economy. Anarcho-communists advocate a gift economy as an ideal, with neither money, nor markets, nor planning. This view traces back at least to Peter Kropotkin, who saw in the hunter-gatherer tribes he had visited the paradigm of "mutual aid".[74] In place of a market, anarcho-communists, such as those who lived in some Spanish villages in the 1930s, support a gift economy without currency, where goods and services are produced by workers and distributed in community stores where everyone (including the workers who produced them) is essentially entitled to consume whatever they want or need as payment for their production of goods and services.[75]

As an intellectual abstraction, mutual aid was developed and advanced by mutualism or labor insurance systems and thus trade unions, and has been also used in cooperatives and other civil society movements. Typically, mutual-aid groups are free to join and participate in, and all activities are voluntary. Often they are structured as non-hierarchical, non-bureaucratic non-profit organizations, with members controlling all resources and no external financial or professional support. They are member-led and member-organized. They are egalitarian in nature, and designed to support participatory democracy, equality of member status and power, and shared leadership and cooperative decision-making. Members' external societal status is considered irrelevant inside the group: status in the group is conferred by participation.[76]

Moral economy edit

English historian E.P. Thompson wrote about the moral economy of the poor in the context of widespread English food riots in the English countryside in the late 18th century. Thompson claimed that these riots were generally peaceable acts that demonstrated a common political culture rooted in feudal rights to "set the price" of essential goods in the market. These peasants believed that a traditional "fair price" was more important to the community than a "free" market price and they punished large farmers who sold their surpluses at higher prices outside the village while some village members still needed produce. Thus a moral economy is an attempt to preserve an alternative exchange sphere from market penetration.[77][78] The notion of peasants with a non-capitalist cultural mentality using the market for their own ends has been linked to subsistence agriculture and the need for subsistence insurance in hard times. However, James C. Scott points out that those who provide this subsistence insurance to the poor in bad years are wealthy patrons who exact a political cost for their aid; this aid is given to recruit followers. The concept of moral economy has been used to explain why peasants in a number of colonial contexts, such as the Vietnam War, have rebelled.[79]

The commons edit

Some may confuse common property regimes with gift exchange systems. The commons is the cultural and natural resources accessible to all members of a society, including natural materials such as air, water, and a habitable earth. These resources are held in common, not owned privately.[80] The resources held in common can include everything from natural resources and common land to software.[81] The commons contains public property and private property, over which people have certain traditional rights. When commonly held property is transformed into private property this process is called "enclosure" or "privatization". A person who has a right in, or over, common land jointly with another or others is called a commoner.[82]

There are a number of important aspects that can be used to describe true commons. The first is that the commons cannot be commodified – if they are, they cease to be commons. The second aspect is that unlike private property, the commons are inclusive rather than exclusive – their nature is to share ownership as widely, rather than as narrowly, as possible. The third aspect is that the assets in commons are meant to be preserved regardless of their return of capital. Just as we receive them as a shared right, so we have a duty to pass them on to future generations in at least the same condition as we received them. If we can add to their value, so much the better, but at a minimum we must not degrade them, and we certainly have no right to destroy them.[83]

New intellectual commons: free content edit

Free content, or free information, is any kind of functional work, artwork, or other creative content that meets the definition of a free cultural work.[84] A free cultural work is one which has no significant legal restriction on people's freedom:

  • To use the content and benefit from using it,
  • To study the content and apply what is learned,
  • To make and distribute copies of the content,
  • To change and improve the content and distribute these derivative works.[85][86]

Although different definitions are used, free content is legally similar if not identical to open content. An analogy is the use of the rival terms free software and open source which describe ideological differences rather than legal ones.[87] Free content encompasses all works in the public domain and also those copyrighted works whose licenses honor and uphold the freedoms mentioned above. Because copyright law in most countries by default grants copyright holders monopolistic control over their creations, copyright content must be explicitly declared free, usually by the referencing or inclusion of licensing statements from within the work.

Although a work which is in the public domain because its copyright has expired is considered free, it can become non-free again if the copyright law changes.[88]

Information is particularly suited to gift economies, as information is a nonrival good and can be gifted at practically no cost (zero marginal cost).[89][90] In fact, there is often an advantage to using the same software or data formats as others, so even from a selfish perspective, it can be advantageous to give away one's information.

Filesharing edit

Markus Giesler, in his ethnography Consumer Gift System, described music downloading as a system of social solidarity based on gift transactions.[91] As Internet access spread, file sharing became extremely popular among users who could contribute and receive files on line. This form of gift economy was a model for online services such as Napster, which focused on music sharing and was later sued for copyright infringement. Nonetheless, online file sharing persists in various forms such as BitTorrent and direct download link. A number of communications and intellectual property experts such as Henry Jenkins and Lawrence Lessig have described file-sharing as a form of gift exchange which provides many benefits to artists and consumers alike. They have argued that file sharing fosters community among distributors and allows for a more equitable distribution of media.

Free and open-source software edit

In his essay "Homesteading the Noosphere", noted computer programmer Eric S. Raymond said that free and open-source software developers have created "a 'gift culture' in which participants compete for prestige by giving time, energy, and creativity away".[92] Prestige gained as a result of contributions to source code fosters a social network for the developer; the open source community will recognize the developer's accomplishments and intelligence. Consequently, the developer may find more opportunities to work with other developers. However, prestige is not the only motivator for the giving of lines of code. An anthropological study of the Fedora community, as part of a master's study at the University of North Texas in 2010–11, found that common reasons given by contributors were "learning for the joy of learning and collaborating with interesting and smart people". Motivation for personal gain, such as career benefits, was more rarely reported. Many of those surveyed said things like, "Mainly I contribute just to make it work for me", and "programmers develop software to 'scratch an itch'".[93] The International Institute of Infonomics at the University of Maastricht in the Netherlands reported in 2002 that in addition to the above, large corporations, and they specifically mentioned IBM, also spend large annual sums employing developers specifically for them to contribute to open source projects. The firms' and the employees' motivations in such cases are less clear.[94]

Members of the Linux community often speak of their community as a gift economy.[95] The IT research firm IDC valued the Linux kernel at US$18 billion in 2007 and projected its value at US$40 billion in 2010.[96] The Debian distribution of the GNU/Linux operating system offers over 37,000 free open-source software packages via their AMD64 repositories alone.[97]

Collaborative works edit

Collaborative works are works created by an open community. For example, Wikipedia – a free online encyclopedia – features millions of articles developed collaboratively, and almost none of its many authors and editors receive any direct material reward.[98][99]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Cheal, David J (1988). "1". The Gift Economy. New York: Routledge. pp. 1–19. ISBN 0415006414. Retrieved 2009-06-18.
  2. ^ R. Kranton: Reciprocal exchange: a self-sustaining system, American Economic Review, V. 86 (1996), Issue 4 (September), pp. 830–851
  3. ^ Malinowski, Bronislaw (1922). Argonauts of the Western Pacific. London.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  4. ^ Keesing, Roger; Strathern, Andrew (1988). Cultural Anthropology. A Contemporary Perspective. Fort Worth: Harcourt Brace and Company. p. 165.
  5. ^ a b c Mauss, Marcel (1970). The Gift: Forms and Functions of Exchange in Archaic Societies. London: Cohen & West.
  6. ^ a b c d e Weiner, Annette (1992). Inalienable Possessions: The Paradox of Keeping-while-Giving. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  7. ^ Bollier, David. "The Stubborn Vitality of the Gift Economy." Silent Theft: The Private Plunder of Our Common Wealth. First Printing ed. New York: Routledge, 2002. 38–39[ISBN missing].
  8. ^ J. Parry, M. Bloch (1989). "Introduction" in Money and the Morality of Exchange. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 8–12.
  9. ^ Parry, Jonathan (1986). "The Gift, the Indian Gift and the 'Indian Gift'". Man. 21 (3): 453–473. doi:10.2307/2803096. JSTOR 2803096. S2CID 152071807.
  10. ^ a b c Parry, Jonathan (1986). "The Gift, the Indian Gift and the 'Indian Gift'". Man. 21 (3): 467. doi:10.2307/2803096. JSTOR 2803096. S2CID 152071807.
  11. ^ Gregory, Chris (1982). Gifts and Commodities. London: Academic Press. pp. 6–9.
  12. ^ a b c Hann, C.M. (1998). Property Relations: Renewing the Anthropological Tradition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 4.
  13. ^ Sider, Gerald M. (1980). "The Ties That Bind: Culture and Agriculture, Property and Propriety in the Newfoundland Village Fishery". Social History. 5 (1): 2–3, 17. doi:10.1080/03071028008567469.
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  15. ^ Friedman, Jonathan (1999). "The Cultural Life of Intellectual Properties: Authorship, Appropriation, and the Law". American Ethnologist. 26 (4): 1001–1002. doi:10.1525/ae.1999.26.4.1001.
  16. ^ Aragon, Lorraine; James Leach (2008). "Arts and Owners: Intellectual property law and the politics of scale in Indonesian Arts". American Ethnologist. 35 (4): 607–631. doi:10.1111/j.1548-1425.2008.00101.x.
  17. ^ Coombe, Rosemary J. (1993). "Cultural and Intellectual Properties: Occupying the Colonial Imagination". PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review. 16 (1): 8–15. doi:10.1525/pol.1993.16.1.8.
  18. ^ Chris Hann, Keith Hart (2011). Economic Anthropology: History, Ethnography, Critique. Cambridge: Polity Press. p. 158.
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  21. ^ a b Parry, Jonathan (1986). "The Gift, the Indian Gift and the 'Indian Gift'". Man. 21 (3): 466–469. doi:10.2307/2803096. JSTOR 2803096. S2CID 152071807.
  22. ^ a b Hann, Chris, Hart, Keith (2011). Economic Anthropology: History, Ethnography, Critique. Cambridge: Polity Press. p. 50.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
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  49. ^ Schrauwers, Albert (2009). 'Union is Strength': W.L. Mackenzie, The Children of Peace and the Emergence of Joint Stock Democracy in Upper Canada. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. pp. 97–124.
  50. ^ Rus, Andrej (2008)."'Gift vs. commoditiy' debate revisited". Anthropological Notebooks 14 (1): 81–102.
  51. ^ "Organs For Sale: China's Growing Trade and Ultimate Violation of Prisoners' Rights". June 27, 2001. Retrieved February 12, 2019.
  52. ^ Schepper-Hughes, Nancy (2000). "The Global Traffic in Human Organs". Current Anthropology. 41 (2): 193. doi:10.1086/300123. S2CID 23897844.
  53. ^ a b Schepper-Hughes, Nancy (2000). "The Global Traffic in Human Organs". Current Anthropology. 41 (2): 191–224. doi:10.1086/300123. PMID 10702141. S2CID 23897844.
  54. ^ Sharp, Lesley A. (2000). "The Commodification of the Body and its Parts". Annual Review of Anthropology. 29: 303. doi:10.1146/annurev.anthro.29.1.287. PMID 15977341.
  55. ^ Tober, Diane M. (2001). "Semen as Gift, Semen as Goods: Reproductive Workers and the Market in Altruism". Body & Society. 7 (2–3): 137–160. doi:10.1177/1357034x0100700205. S2CID 145687310.
  56. ^ Titmuss, Richard (1997). The Gift Relationship: From human blood to social policy. New York: The New Press.
  57. ^ Silvestri P., “The All too Human Welfare State. Freedom Between Gift and Corruption”, Teoria e critica della regolazione sociale, 2/2019, pp. 123–145. DOI: https://doi.org/10.7413/19705476007
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Further reading edit

The concept of a gift economy has played a large role in works of fiction about alternative societies, especially in works of science fiction. Examples include:

  • News from Nowhere (1890) by William Morris is a utopian novel about a society which operates on a gift economy.
  • The Great Explosion (1962) by Eric Frank Russell describes the encounter of a military survey ship and a Gandhian pacifist society that operates as a gift economy.
  • The Dispossessed (1974) by Ursula K. Le Guin is a novel about a gift economy society that had exiled themselves from their (capitalist) home planet.
  • The Mars trilogy, a series of books written by Kim Stanley Robinson in the 1990s, suggests that new human societies that develop away from Earth could migrate toward a gift economy.
  • The movie Pay It Forward (2000) centers on a schoolboy who, for a school project, comes up with the idea of doing a good deed for another and then asking the recipient to "pay it forward". Although the phrase "gift economy" is never explicitly mentioned, the scheme would, in effect, create one.
  • Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom (2003) by Cory Doctorow describes future society where rejuvenation and body-enhancement have made death obsolete, and material goods are no longer scarce, resulting in a reputation-based (whuffie) economic system.
  • Wizard's Holiday (2003) by Diane Duane describes two young wizards visiting a utopian-like planet whose economy is based on gift-giving and mutual support.
  • Voyage from Yesteryear (1982) by James P. Hogan describes a society of the embryo colonists of Alpha Centauri who have a post-scarcity gift economy.
  • Cradle of Saturn (1999) and its sequel The Anguished Dawn (2003) by James P. Hogan describe a colonization effort on Saturn's largest satellite. Both describe the challenges involved in adopting a new economic paradigm.
  • Science fiction author Bruce Sterling wrote a story, Maneki-neko, in which the cat-paw gesture is the sign of a secret AI-based gift economy.

gift, economy, gift, economy, gift, culture, system, exchange, where, valuables, sold, rather, given, without, explicit, agreement, immediate, future, rewards, social, norms, customs, govern, giving, gift, gift, culture, although, there, some, expectation, rec. A gift economy or gift culture is a system of exchange where valuables are not sold but rather given without an explicit agreement for immediate or future rewards 1 Social norms and customs govern giving a gift in a gift culture although there is some expectation of reciprocity gifts are not given in an explicit exchange of goods or services for money or some other commodity or service 2 This contrasts with a barter economy or a market economy where goods and services are primarily explicitly exchanged for value received The nature of gift economies is the subject of a foundational debate in anthropology Anthropological research into gift economies began with Bronislaw Malinowski s description of the Kula ring 3 in the Trobriand Islands during World War I 4 The Kula trade appeared to be gift like since Trobrianders would travel great distances over dangerous seas to give what were considered valuable objects without any guarantee of a return Malinowski s debate with the French anthropologist Marcel Mauss quickly established the complexity of gift exchange and introduced a series of technical terms such as reciprocity inalienable possessions and presentation to distinguish between the different forms of exchange 5 6 According to anthropologists Maurice Bloch and Jonathan Parry it is the unsettled relationship between market and non market exchange that attracts the most attention Some authors argue that gift economies build community 7 while markets harm community relationships 8 Gift exchange is distinguished from other forms of exchange by a number of principles such as the form of property rights governing the articles exchanged whether gifting forms a distinct sphere of exchange that can be characterized as an economic system and the character of the social relationship that the gift exchange establishes Gift ideology in highly commercialized societies differs from the prestations typical of non market societies Gift economies also differ from related phenomena such as common property regimes and the exchange of non commodified labour Contents 1 Principles of gift exchange 1 1 Property and alienability 1 2 Gift versus prestation 1 3 Inalienable possessions 1 4 Reciprocity and the spirit of the gift 1 5 Charity debt and the poison of the gift 1 6 Spheres of exchange and economic systems 1 7 Proscriptions 2 Case studies prestations 2 1 Moka exchange in Papua New Guinea competitive exchange 2 2 Toraja funerals the politics of meat distribution 3 Charity and alms giving 3 1 Merit making in Buddhist Thailand 3 2 Charity Dana in India 3 3 The Children of Peace in Canada 4 Gifting as non commodified exchange in market societies 4 1 Organ transplant networks sperm and blood banks 4 2 Copyleft vs copyright the gift of free speech 4 3 Points and loyalty programs 4 4 Free shops 4 5 Burning Man 4 6 Cannabis market in the District of Columbia and U S states 5 Related concepts 5 1 Mutual aid 5 2 Moral economy 5 3 The commons 5 4 New intellectual commons free content 5 4 1 Filesharing 5 4 2 Free and open source software 5 4 3 Collaborative works 6 See also 7 Notes 8 Further readingPrinciples of gift exchange editAccording to anthropologist Jonathan Parry discussion on the nature of gifts and of a separate sphere of gift exchange that would constitute an economic system has been plagued by the ethnocentric use of a modern western market society based conception of the gift applied as if it were a universal across culture and time However he claims that anthropologists through analysis of a variety of cultural and historical forms of exchange have established that no universal practice exists 9 Similarly the idea of a pure gift is most likely to arise in highly differentiated societies with an advanced division of labour and a significant commercial sector and need to be distinguished from non market prestations 10 According to Weiner to speak of a gift economy in a non market society is to ignore the distinctive features of their exchange relationships as the early classic debate between Bronislaw Malinowski and Marcel Mauss demonstrated 5 6 Gift exchange is frequently embedded in political kin or religious institutions and therefore does not constitute an economic system per se 11 Property and alienability edit Gift giving is a form of transfer of property rights over particular objects The nature of those property rights varies from society to society from culture to culture They are not universal The nature of gift giving is thus altered by the type of property regime in place 12 Property is not a thing but a relationship amongst people about things 13 It is a social relationship that governs the conduct of people with respect to the use and disposition of things Anthropologists analyze these relationships in terms of a variety of actors individual or corporate bundle of rights over objects 12 An example is the current debates around intellectual property rights 14 15 16 17 Take a purchased book over which the author retains a copyright Although the book is a commodity bought and sold it has not been completely alienated from its creator who maintains a hold over it the owner of the book is limited in what he can do with the book by the rights of the creator 18 19 Weiner has argued that the ability to give while retaining a right to the gift commodity is a critical feature of the gifting cultures described by Malinowski and Mauss and explains for example why some gifts such as Kula valuables return to their original owners after an incredible journey around the Trobriand islands The gifts given in Kula exchange still remain in some respects the property of the giver 6 In the example used above copyright is one of those bundled rights that regulate the use and disposition of a book Gift giving in many societies is complicated because private property owned by an individual may be quite limited in scope see The commons below 12 Productive resources such as land may be held by members of a corporate group such as a lineage but only some members of that group may have use rights When many people hold rights over the same objects gifting has very different implications than the gifting of private property only some of the rights in that object may be transferred leaving that object still tied to its corporate owners As such these types of objects are inalienable possessions simultaneously kept while given 6 Gift versus prestation edit nbsp A Kula necklace with its distinctive red shell disc beads from the Trobriand IslandsMalinowski s study of the Kula ring 20 became the subject of debate with the French anthropologist Marcel Mauss author of The Gift Essai sur le don 1925 5 Parry argued that Malinowski emphasized the exchange of goods between individuals and their selfish motives for gifting they expected a return of equal or greater value Malinowski argued that reciprocity is an implicit part of gifting that there is no gift free of expectation 21 In contrast Mauss emphasized that the gifts were not between individuals but between representatives of larger collectives These gifts were a total prestation a service provided out of obligation like community service 22 They were not alienable commodities to be bought and sold but like crown jewels embodied the reputation history and identity of a corporate kin group such as a line of kings Given the stakes Mauss asked why anyone would give them away His answer was an enigmatic concept the spirit of the gift Parry believes that much of the confusion and resulting debate was due to a bad translation Mauss appeared to be arguing that a return gift is given to maintain the relationship between givers a failure to return a gift ends the relationship and the promise of any future gifts Both Malinowski and Mauss agreed that in non market societies where there was no clear institutionalized economic exchange system gift prestation exchange served economic kinship religious and political functions that could not be clearly distinguished from each other and which mutually influenced the nature of the practice 21 Inalienable possessions edit nbsp Watercolor by James G Swan depicting the Klallam people of chief Chetzemoka at Port Townsend with one of Chetzemoka s wives distributing potlatchThe concept of total prestations was further developed by Annette Weiner who revisited Malinowski s fieldsite in the Trobriand Islands Her critique was twofold First Trobriand Island society is matrilineal and women hold much economic and political power but their exchanges were ignored by Malinowski Secondly she developed Mauss argument about reciprocity and the spirit of the gift in terms of inalienable possessions the paradox of keeping while giving 6 Weiner contrasted moveable goods which can be exchanged with immoveable goods that serve to draw the gifts back in the Trobriand case male Kula gifts with women s landed property The goods given on the islands are so linked to particular groups that even when given away they are not truly alienated Such goods depend on the existence of particular kinds of kinship groups in society French anthropologist Maurice Godelier 23 continued this analysis in The Enigma of the Gift 1999 Albert Schrauwers argued that the kinds of societies used as examples by Weiner and Godelier including the Kula ring in the Trobriands the Potlatch of the indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest Coast and the Toraja of South Sulawesi Indonesia are all characterized by ranked aristocratic kin groups that fit Claude Levi Strauss model of House Societies where house refers to both noble lineage and their landed estate Total prestations are given to preserve landed estates identified with particular kin groups and maintain their place in a ranked society 24 Reciprocity and the spirit of the gift edit Chris Gregory argued that reciprocity is a dyadic exchange relationship that we characterize imprecisely as gift giving Gregory argued that one gives gifts to friends and potential enemies in order to establish a relationship by placing them in debt He also claimed that in order for such a relationship to persist there must be a time lag between the gift and counter gift one or the other partner must always be in debt Marshall Sahlins gave birthday gifts as an example They are separated in time so that one partner feels the obligation to make a return gift To forget the return gift may be enough to end the relationship Gregory stated that without a relationship of debt there is no reciprocity and that this is what distinguishes a gift economy from a true gift given with no expectation of return something Sahlins generalised reciprocity see below 25 Marshall Sahlins an American cultural anthropologist identified three main types of reciprocity in his book Stone Age Economics 1972 Gift or generalized reciprocity is the exchange of goods and services without keeping track of their exact value but often with the expectation that their value will balance out over time Balanced or Symmetrical reciprocity occurs when someone gives to someone else expecting a fair and tangible return at a specified amount time and place Market or negative reciprocity is the exchange of goods and services where each party intends to profit from the exchange often at the expense of the other Gift economies or generalized reciprocity occurred within closely knit kin groups and the more distant the exchange partner the more balanced or negative the exchange became 26 Charity debt and the poison of the gift edit Jonathan Parry argued that ideologies of the pure gift are most likely to arise only in highly differentiated societies with an advanced division of labour and a significant commercial sector and need to be distinguished from the non market prestations discussed above 10 Parry also underscored using the example of charitable giving of alms in India Dana that the pure gift of alms given with no expectation of return could be poisonous That is the gift of alms embodying the sins of the giver when given to ritually pure priests saddled these priests with impurities of which they could not cleanse themselves Pure gifts given without a return can place recipients in debt and hence in dependent status the poison of the gift 27 David Graeber points out that no reciprocity is expected between unequals if you make a gift of a dollar to a beggar he will not give it back the next time you meet More than likely he will ask for more to the detriment of his status 28 Many who are forced by circumstances to accept charity feel stigmatized In the Moka exchange system of Papua New Guinea where gift givers become political big men those who are in their debt and unable to repay with interest are referred to as rubbish men The French writer Georges Bataille in La part Maudite uses Mauss s argument in order to construct a theory of economy the structure of gift is the presupposition for all possible economy Bataille is particularly interested in the potlatch as described by Mauss and claims that its agonistic character obliges the receiver to confirm their own subjection Thus gifting embodies the Hegelian dipole of master and slave within the act Spheres of exchange and economic systems edit The relationship of new market exchange systems to indigenous non market exchange remained a perplexing question for anthropologists Paul Bohannan argued that the Tiv of Nigeria had three spheres of exchange and that only certain kinds of goods could be exchanged in each sphere each sphere had its own form of special purpose money However the market and universal money allowed goods to be traded between spheres and thus damaged established social relationships 29 Jonathan Parry and Maurice Bloch argued in Money and the Morality of Exchange 1989 that the transactional order through which long term social reproduction of the family occurs has to be preserved as separate from short term market relations 30 It is the long term social reproduction of the family that is sacralized by religious rituals such baptisms weddings and funerals and characterized by gifting In such situations where gift giving and market exchange were intersecting for the first time some anthropologists contrasted them as polar opposites This opposition was classically expressed by Chris Gregory in his book Gifts and Commodities 1982 Gregory argued that Commodity exchange is an exchange of alienable objects between people who are in a state of reciprocal independence that establishes a quantitative relationship between the objects exchanged Gift exchange is an exchange of inalienable objects between people who are in a state of reciprocal dependence that establishes a qualitative relationship between the transactors emphasis added 31 Gregory contrasts gift and commodity exchange according to five criteria 32 Commodity exchange Gift exchangeimmediate exchange delayed exchangealienable goods inalienable goodsactors independent actors dependentquantitative relationship qualitative relationshipbetween objects between peopleBut other anthropologists refused to see these different exchange spheres as such polar opposites Marilyn Strathern writing on a similar area in Papua New Guinea dismissed the utility of the contrasting setup in The Gender of the Gift 1988 33 nbsp Wedding rings could be considered a commodity pure gift or both Rather than emphasize how particular kinds of objects are either gifts or commodities to be traded in restricted spheres of exchange Arjun Appadurai and others began to look at how objects flowed between these spheres of exchange i e how objects can be converted into gifts and then back into commodities They refocussed attention away from the character of the human relationships formed through exchange and placed it on the social life of things instead They examined the strategies by which an object could be singularized made unique special one of a kind and so withdrawn from the market A marriage ceremony that transforms a purchased ring into an irreplaceable family heirloom is one example the heirloom in turn makes a perfect gift Singularization is the reverse of the seemingly irresistible process of commodification They thus show how all economies are a constant flow of material objects that enter and leave specific exchange spheres A similar approach is taken by Nicholas Thomas who examines the same range of cultures and the anthropologists who write on them and redirects attention to the entangled objects and their roles as both gifts and commodities 34 Proscriptions edit Many societies have strong prohibitions against turning gifts into trade or capital goods Anthropologist Wendy James writes that among the Uduk people of northeast Africa there is a strong custom that any gift that crosses subclan boundaries must be consumed rather than invested 35 4 For example an animal given as a gift must be eaten not bred However as in the example of the Trobriand armbands and necklaces this perishing may not consist of consumption as such but of the gift moving on In other societies it is a matter of giving some other gift either directly in return or to another party To keep the gift and not give another in exchange is reprehensible In folk tales Lewis Hyde remarks the person who tries to hold onto a gift usually dies 35 5 Daniel Everett a linguist who studied the small Piraha tribe of hunter gatherers in Brazil 36 reported that while they are aware of food preservation using drying salting and so forth they reserve their use for items bartered outside the tribe Within the group when someone has a successful hunt they immediately share the abundance by inviting others to enjoy a feast Asked about this practice one hunter laughed and replied I store meat in the belly of my brother 37 38 Carol Stack s All Our Kin describes both the positive and negative sides of a network of obligation and gratitude effectively constituting a gift economy Her narrative of The Flats a poor Chicago neighborhood tells in passing the story of two sisters who each came into a small inheritance One sister hoarded the inheritance and prospered materially for some time but was alienated from the community Her marriage broke up and she integrated herself back into the community largely by giving gifts The other sister fulfilled the community s expectations but within six weeks had nothing material to show for the inheritance but a coat and a pair of shoes 35 75 76 Case studies prestations editMarcel Mauss was careful to distinguish gift economies reciprocity in market societies from the total prestations given in non market societies A prestation is a service provided out of obligation like community service 22 These prestations bring together domains across political religious legal moral and economic definitions such that the exchange can be seen to be embedded in non economic social institutions These prestations are often competitive as in the potlatch Kula exchange and Moka exchange 39 Moka exchange in Papua New Guinea competitive exchange edit Main article Moka exchange nbsp Mount Hagen Papua New GuineaThe Moka is a highly ritualized system of exchange in the Mount Hagen area of Papua New Guinea that has become emblematic of the anthropological concepts of a gift economy and of a big man political system Moka are reciprocal gifts that raise the social status of the giver if the gift is larger than one that the giver received Moka refers specifically to the increment in the size of the gift 40 The gifts are of a limited range of goods primarily pigs and scarce pearl shells from the coast To return the same value as one has received in a moka is simply to repay a debt strict reciprocity Moka is the extra To some this represents interest on an investment However one is not bound to provide moka only to repay the debt One adds moka to the gift to increase one s prestige and to place the receiver in debt It is this constant renewal of the debt relationship which keeps the relationship alive a debt fully paid off ends further interaction Giving more than one receives establishes a reputation as a Big man whereas the simple repayment of debt or failure to fully repay pushes one s reputation towards the other end of the scale rubbish man 41 Gift exchange thus has a political effect granting prestige or status to one and a sense of debt in the other A political system can be built out of these kinds of status relationships Sahlins characterizes the difference between status and rank by highlighting that Big man is not a role it is a status that is shared by many The Big man is not a prince of men but a prince among men The big man system is based on the ability to persuade rather than command 42 Toraja funerals the politics of meat distribution edit nbsp Three tongkonan noble houses in a Torajan village nbsp Slaughter of swine at a funeralThe Toraja are an ethnic group indigenous to a mountainous region of South Sulawesi Indonesia 43 Torajans are renowned for their elaborate funeral rites burial sites carved into rocky cliffs and massive peaked roof traditional houses known as tongkonan which are owned by noble families Membership in a tongkonan is inherited by all descendants of its founders Thus any individual may be a member of numerous tongkonan as long as they contribute to its ritual events Membership in a tongkonan carries benefits such as the right to rent some of its rice fields 44 Toraja funeral rites are important social events usually attended by hundreds of people and lasting several days The funerals are like big men competitions where all the descendants of a tongkonan compete through gifts of sacrificial cattle Participants have invested cattle with others over the years and draw on those extended networks to make the largest gift The winner of the competition becomes the new owner of the tongkonan and its rice lands They display all the cattle horns from their winning sacrifice on a pole in front of the tongkonan 44 The Toraja funeral differs from the big man system in that the winner of the gift exchange gains control of the Tongkonan s property It creates a clear social hierarchy between the noble owners of the tongkonan and its land and the commoners who are forced to rent their fields from him Since the owners of the tongkonan gain rent they are better able to compete in the funeral gift exchanges and their social rank is more stable than the big man system 44 Charity and alms giving editMain article Alms Anthropologist David Graeber argued that the great world religious traditions of charity and gift giving emerged almost simultaneously during the Axial age 800 to 200 BCE when coinage was invented and market economies were established on a continental basis Graeber argues that these charity traditions emerged as a reaction against the nexus formed by coinage slavery military violence and the market a military coinage complex The new world religions including Hinduism Judaism Buddhism Confucianism Christianity and Islam all sought to preserve human economies where money served to cement social relationships rather than purchase things including people 45 Charity and alms giving are religiously sanctioned voluntary gifts given without expectation of return However case studies show that such gifting is not necessarily altruistic 46 Merit making in Buddhist Thailand edit nbsp Young Burmese monkTheravada Buddhism in Thailand emphasizes the importance of giving alms merit making without any intention of return a pure gift which is best accomplished according to doctrine through gifts to monks and temples The emphasis is on the selfless gifting which earns merit and a future better life for the giver rather than on the relief of the poor or the recipient on whom the gift is bestowed However Bowie s research shows that this ideal form of gifting is limited to the rich who have the resources to endow temples and sponsor the ordination of monks 47 Monks come from these same families so this gifting doctrine has a class element Poorer farmers place much less emphasis on merit making through gifts to monks and temples They equally validate gifting to beggars Poverty and famine is widespread among these poorer groups and by validating gift giving to beggars they are in fact demanding that the rich see to their needs in hard times Bowie sees this as an example of a moral economy see below in which the poor use gossip and reputation to resist elite exploitation and pressure them to ease their this world suffering 48 Charity Dana in India edit Dana is a form of religious charity given in Hindu India The gift is said to embody the sins of the giver the poison of the gift whom it frees of evil by transmitting it to the recipient The merit of the gift depends on finding a worthy recipient such as a Brahmin priest Priests are supposed to be able to digest the sin through ritual action and transmit the gift with increment to someone of greater worth It is imperative that this be a true gift with no reciprocity or the evil will return The gift is not intended to create any relationship between donor and recipient and there should never be a return gift Dana thus transgresses the so called universal norm of reciprocity 10 The Children of Peace in Canada edit nbsp Sharon TempleThe Children of Peace 1812 1889 were a utopian Quaker sect Today they are primarily remembered for the Sharon Temple a national historic site and an architectural symbol of their vision of a society based on the values of peace equality and social justice They built this ornate temple to raise money for the poor and built the province of Ontario s first shelter for the homeless They took a lead role in organizing the province s first co operative the Farmers Storehouse and opened the province s first credit union The group soon found that the charity they tried to distribute from their Temple fund endangered the poor Accepting charity was a sign of indebtedness and the debtor could be jailed without trial at the time this was the poison of the gift They thus transformed their charity fund into a credit union that loaned small sums like today s micro credit institutions This is an example of singularization as money was transformed into charity in the Temple ceremony then shifted to an alternative exchange sphere as a loan Interest on the loan was then singularized and transformed back into charity 49 Gifting as non commodified exchange in market societies editNon commodified spheres of exchange exist in relation to the market economy They are created through the processes of singularization as specific objects are de commodified for a variety of reasons and enter an alternative exchange sphere It may be in opposition to the market and to its perceived greed It may also be used by corporations as a means of creating a sense of endebtedness and loyalty in customers Modern marketing techniques often aim at infusing commodity exchange with features of gift exchange thus blurring the presumably sharp distinction between gifts and commodities 50 Organ transplant networks sperm and blood banks edit nbsp Blood donation poster WWIIMain article Organ gifting Market economies tend to reduce everything including human beings their labor and their reproductive capacity to the status of commodities 51 The rapid transfer of organ transplant technology to the third world has created a trade in organs with sick bodies travelling to the Global South for transplants and healthy organs from the Global South being transported to the richer Global North creating a kind of Kula ring of bodies and body parts 52 However all commodities can also be singularized or de commodified and transformed into gifts In North America it is illegal to sell organs and citizens are enjoined to give the gift of life and donate their organs in an organ gift economy 53 However this gift economy is a medical realm rife with potent forms of mystified commodification 54 This multimillion dollar medical industry requires clients to pay steep fees for the gifted organ which creates clear class divisions between those who donate often in the global south and will never benefit from gifted organs and those who can pay the fees and thereby receive a gifted organ 53 Unlike body organs blood and semen have been successfully and legally commodified in the United States Blood and semen can thus be commodified but once consumed are the gift of life Although both can be either donated or sold are perceived as the gift of life yet are stored in banks and can be collected only under strict government regulated procedures recipients very clearly prefer altruistically donated semen and blood The blood and semen samples with the highest market value are those that have been altruistically donated The recipients view semen as storing the potential characteristics of their unborn child in its DNA and value altruism over greed 55 Similarly gifted blood is the archetype of a pure gift relationship because the donor is only motivated by a desire to help others 56 57 Copyleft vs copyright the gift of free speech edit Main article Copyleft Engineers scientists and software developers have created free software projects such as the Linux kernel and the GNU operating system They are prototypical examples for the gift economy s prominence in the technology sector and its active role in instating the use of permissive free software and copyleft licenses which allow free reuse of software and knowledge Other examples include file sharing open access unlicensed software and so on Points and loyalty programs edit Main article Loyalty program Many retail organizations have gift programs meant to encourage customer loyalty to their establishments Bird David and Darr refer to these as hybrid mass gifts which are neither gift nor commodity They are called mass gifts because they are given away in large numbers free with purchase in a mass consumption environment They give as an example two bars of soap in which one is given free with purchase which is the commodity and which the gift The mass gift both affirms the distinct difference between gift and commodity while confusing it at the same time As with gifting mass gifts are used to create a social relationship Some customers embrace the relationship and gift whereas others reject the gift relationship and interpret the gift as a 50 off sale 58 Free shops edit Main article Give away shop nbsp Inside Utrecht Giveaway shop The banner reads The earth has enough for everyone s need but not for everyone s greed Give away shops freeshops or free stores are stores where all goods are free They are similar to charity shops with mostly second hand items only everything is available at no cost Whether it is a book a piece of furniture a garment or a household item it is all freely given away although some operate a one in one out type policy swap shops The free store is a form of constructive direct action that provides a shopping alternative to a monetary framework allowing people to exchange goods and services outside a money based economy The anarchist 1960s countercultural group The Diggers 59 opened free stores which gave away their stock provided free food distributed free drugs gave away money organized free music concerts and performed works of political art 60 The Diggers took their name from the original English Diggers led by Gerrard Winstanley 61 and sought to create a mini society free of money and capitalism 62 Burning Man edit Main article Burning Man nbsp Black Rock City the temporary settlement created in the Nevada Desert for Burning Man 2010Burning Man is a week long annual art and community event held in the Black Rock Desert in northern Nevada in the United States The event is described as an experiment in community radical self expression and radical self reliance The event forbids commerce except for ice coffee and tickets to the event itself 63 and encourages gifting 64 Gifting is one of the 10 guiding principles 65 as participants to Burning Man both the desert festival and the year round global community are encouraged to rely on a gift economy The practice of gifting at Burning Man is also documented by the 2002 documentary film Gifting It A Burning Embrace of Gift Economy 66 as well as by Making Contact s radio show How We Survive The Currency of Giving encore 64 Cannabis market in the District of Columbia and U S states edit Main article Cannabis in Washington D C According to the Associated Press Gift giving has long been a part of marijuana culture and has accompanied legalization in U S states in the 2010s 67 Voters in the District of Columbia legalized the growing of cannabis for personal recreational use by approving Initiative 71 in November 2014 but the 2015 Cromnibus Federal appropriations bills prevented the District from creating a system to allow for its commercial sale Possession growth and use of the drug by adults is legal in the District as is giving it away but sale and barter of it is not in effect attempting to create a gift economy 68 However it ended up creating a commercial market linked to selling other objects 69 Preceding the January 2018 legalization of cannabis possession in Vermont without a corresponding legal framework for sales it was expected that a similar market would emerge there 70 For a time people in Portland Oregon could only legally obtain cannabis as a gift which was celebrated in the Burnside Burn rally 71 For a time a similar situation ensued after possession was legalized in California Maine and Massachusetts 67 72 73 Related concepts editMutual aid edit Main article Mutual aid organization theory nbsp The Conquest of Bread by Peter Kropotkin influential work which presents the economic vision of anarcho communismMany anarchists particularly anarcho primitivists and anarcho communists believe that variations on a gift economy may be the key to breaking the cycle of poverty Therefore they often desire to refashion all of society into a gift economy Anarcho communists advocate a gift economy as an ideal with neither money nor markets nor planning This view traces back at least to Peter Kropotkin who saw in the hunter gatherer tribes he had visited the paradigm of mutual aid 74 In place of a market anarcho communists such as those who lived in some Spanish villages in the 1930s support a gift economy without currency where goods and services are produced by workers and distributed in community stores where everyone including the workers who produced them is essentially entitled to consume whatever they want or need as payment for their production of goods and services 75 As an intellectual abstraction mutual aid was developed and advanced by mutualism or labor insurance systems and thus trade unions and has been also used in cooperatives and other civil society movements Typically mutual aid groups are free to join and participate in and all activities are voluntary Often they are structured as non hierarchical non bureaucratic non profit organizations with members controlling all resources and no external financial or professional support They are member led and member organized They are egalitarian in nature and designed to support participatory democracy equality of member status and power and shared leadership and cooperative decision making Members external societal status is considered irrelevant inside the group status in the group is conferred by participation 76 Moral economy edit English historian E P Thompson wrote about the moral economy of the poor in the context of widespread English food riots in the English countryside in the late 18th century Thompson claimed that these riots were generally peaceable acts that demonstrated a common political culture rooted in feudal rights to set the price of essential goods in the market These peasants believed that a traditional fair price was more important to the community than a free market price and they punished large farmers who sold their surpluses at higher prices outside the village while some village members still needed produce Thus a moral economy is an attempt to preserve an alternative exchange sphere from market penetration 77 78 The notion of peasants with a non capitalist cultural mentality using the market for their own ends has been linked to subsistence agriculture and the need for subsistence insurance in hard times However James C Scott points out that those who provide this subsistence insurance to the poor in bad years are wealthy patrons who exact a political cost for their aid this aid is given to recruit followers The concept of moral economy has been used to explain why peasants in a number of colonial contexts such as the Vietnam War have rebelled 79 The commons edit Main article Commons Some may confuse common property regimes with gift exchange systems The commons is the cultural and natural resources accessible to all members of a society including natural materials such as air water and a habitable earth These resources are held in common not owned privately 80 The resources held in common can include everything from natural resources and common land to software 81 The commons contains public property and private property over which people have certain traditional rights When commonly held property is transformed into private property this process is called enclosure or privatization A person who has a right in or over common land jointly with another or others is called a commoner 82 There are a number of important aspects that can be used to describe true commons The first is that the commons cannot be commodified if they are they cease to be commons The second aspect is that unlike private property the commons are inclusive rather than exclusive their nature is to share ownership as widely rather than as narrowly as possible The third aspect is that the assets in commons are meant to be preserved regardless of their return of capital Just as we receive them as a shared right so we have a duty to pass them on to future generations in at least the same condition as we received them If we can add to their value so much the better but at a minimum we must not degrade them and we certainly have no right to destroy them 83 New intellectual commons free content edit Main article Free content Free content or free information is any kind of functional work artwork or other creative content that meets the definition of a free cultural work 84 A free cultural work is one which has no significant legal restriction on people s freedom To use the content and benefit from using it To study the content and apply what is learned To make and distribute copies of the content To change and improve the content and distribute these derivative works 85 86 Although different definitions are used free content is legally similar if not identical to open content An analogy is the use of the rival terms free software and open source which describe ideological differences rather than legal ones 87 Free content encompasses all works in the public domain and also those copyrighted works whose licenses honor and uphold the freedoms mentioned above Because copyright law in most countries by default grants copyright holders monopolistic control over their creations copyright content must be explicitly declared free usually by the referencing or inclusion of licensing statements from within the work Although a work which is in the public domain because its copyright has expired is considered free it can become non free again if the copyright law changes 88 Information is particularly suited to gift economies as information is a nonrival good and can be gifted at practically no cost zero marginal cost 89 90 In fact there is often an advantage to using the same software or data formats as others so even from a selfish perspective it can be advantageous to give away one s information Filesharing edit Markus Giesler in his ethnography Consumer Gift System described music downloading as a system of social solidarity based on gift transactions 91 As Internet access spread file sharing became extremely popular among users who could contribute and receive files on line This form of gift economy was a model for online services such as Napster which focused on music sharing and was later sued for copyright infringement Nonetheless online file sharing persists in various forms such as BitTorrent and direct download link A number of communications and intellectual property experts such as Henry Jenkins and Lawrence Lessig have described file sharing as a form of gift exchange which provides many benefits to artists and consumers alike They have argued that file sharing fosters community among distributors and allows for a more equitable distribution of media Free and open source software edit In his essay Homesteading the Noosphere noted computer programmer Eric S Raymond said that free and open source software developers have created a gift culture in which participants compete for prestige by giving time energy and creativity away 92 Prestige gained as a result of contributions to source code fosters a social network for the developer the open source community will recognize the developer s accomplishments and intelligence Consequently the developer may find more opportunities to work with other developers However prestige is not the only motivator for the giving of lines of code An anthropological study of the Fedora community as part of a master s study at the University of North Texas in 2010 11 found that common reasons given by contributors were learning for the joy of learning and collaborating with interesting and smart people Motivation for personal gain such as career benefits was more rarely reported Many of those surveyed said things like Mainly I contribute just to make it work for me and programmers develop software to scratch an itch 93 The International Institute of Infonomics at the University of Maastricht in the Netherlands reported in 2002 that in addition to the above large corporations and they specifically mentioned IBM also spend large annual sums employing developers specifically for them to contribute to open source projects The firms and the employees motivations in such cases are less clear 94 Members of the Linux community often speak of their community as a gift economy 95 The IT research firm IDC valued the Linux kernel at US 18 billion in 2007 and projected its value at US 40 billion in 2010 96 The Debian distribution of the GNU Linux operating system offers over 37 000 free open source software packages via their AMD64 repositories alone 97 Collaborative works edit Collaborative works are works created by an open community For example Wikipedia a free online encyclopedia features millions of articles developed collaboratively and almost none of its many authors and editors receive any direct material reward 98 99 See also editAnarchist economics Basic income Brownie points Calculation in kind Digital currency Eidi gift Egoboo Food swap Free education Giving circles Gratitude trap History of money Homestay CouchSurfing Knowledge market Natural economy Pay it forward Post scarcity economy Primitive communism Red envelope Round of drinks Solidarity economy World currency Sharing economyNotes edit Cheal David J 1988 1 The Gift Economy New York Routledge pp 1 19 ISBN 0415006414 Retrieved 2009 06 18 R Kranton Reciprocal exchange a self sustaining system American Economic Review V 86 1996 Issue 4 September pp 830 851 Malinowski Bronislaw 1922 Argonauts of the Western Pacific London a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Keesing Roger Strathern Andrew 1988 Cultural Anthropology A Contemporary Perspective Fort Worth Harcourt Brace and Company p 165 a b c Mauss Marcel 1970 The Gift Forms and Functions of Exchange in Archaic Societies London Cohen amp West a b c d e Weiner Annette 1992 Inalienable Possessions The Paradox of Keeping while Giving Berkeley University of California Press Bollier David The Stubborn Vitality of the Gift Economy Silent Theft The Private Plunder of Our Common Wealth First Printing ed New York Routledge 2002 38 39 ISBN missing J Parry M Bloch 1989 Introduction in Money and the Morality of Exchange Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 8 12 Parry Jonathan 1986 The Gift the Indian Gift and the Indian Gift Man 21 3 453 473 doi 10 2307 2803096 JSTOR 2803096 S2CID 152071807 a b c Parry Jonathan 1986 The Gift the Indian Gift and the Indian Gift Man 21 3 467 doi 10 2307 2803096 JSTOR 2803096 S2CID 152071807 Gregory Chris 1982 Gifts and Commodities London Academic Press pp 6 9 a b c Hann C M 1998 Property Relations Renewing the Anthropological Tradition Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 4 Sider Gerald M 1980 The Ties That Bind Culture and Agriculture Property and Propriety in the Newfoundland Village Fishery Social History 5 1 2 3 17 doi 10 1080 03071028008567469 Levitt Leon 1987 On property Intellectual Property the Culture of Property and Software Pirating Anthropology of Work Review 8 1 7 9 doi 10 1525 awr 1987 8 1 7 Friedman Jonathan 1999 The Cultural Life of Intellectual Properties Authorship Appropriation and the Law American Ethnologist 26 4 1001 1002 doi 10 1525 ae 1999 26 4 1001 Aragon Lorraine James Leach 2008 Arts and Owners Intellectual property law and the politics of scale in Indonesian Arts American Ethnologist 35 4 607 631 doi 10 1111 j 1548 1425 2008 00101 x Coombe Rosemary J 1993 Cultural and Intellectual Properties Occupying the Colonial Imagination PoLAR Political and Legal Anthropology Review 16 1 8 15 doi 10 1525 pol 1993 16 1 8 Chris Hann Keith Hart 2011 Economic Anthropology History Ethnography Critique Cambridge Polity Press p 158 Strangelove Michael 2005 The Empire of Mind Digital Piracy and the Anti Capitalist Movement Toronto University of Toronto Press pp 92 96 Malinowski Bronislaw 1984 1922 Argonauts of the Western Pacific an account of native enterprise and adventure in the archipelagoes of Melanesian New Guinea Prospect Heights Ill Waveland Press a b Parry Jonathan 1986 The Gift the Indian Gift and the Indian Gift Man 21 3 466 469 doi 10 2307 2803096 JSTOR 2803096 S2CID 152071807 a b Hann Chris Hart Keith 2011 Economic Anthropology History Ethnography Critique Cambridge Polity Press p 50 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Godelier Maurice 1999 The Enigma of the Gift Cambridge Polity Press Schrauwers Albert 2004 H h ouses E e states and class On the importance of capitals in central Sulawesi Bijdragen tot de Taal Land en Volkenkunde 160 1 72 94 doi 10 1163 22134379 90003735 S2CID 128968473 Gregory Chris 1982 Gifts and Commodities London Academic Press pp 189 194 Sahlins Marshall 1972 Stone Age Economics Chicago Aldine Atherton ISBN 0202010996 Parry Jonathan 1986 The Gift the Indian Gift and the Indian Gift Man 21 3 463 467 doi 10 2307 2803096 JSTOR 2803096 S2CID 152071807 Graeber David 2001 Toward an Anthropological Theory of Value The false coin of our own dreams New York Palgrave p 225 Bohannan Paul 1959 The Impact of money on an African subsistence economy The Journal of Economic History 19 4 491 503 doi 10 1017 S0022050700085946 S2CID 154892567 Parry Jonathan Maurice Bloch 1989 Money and the Morality of Exchange Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 28 30 Gregory Chris 1982 Gifts and Commodities London Academic Press pp 100 101 Gifts and Commodities Chapter III Gifts and commodities Circulation haubooks org Retrieved 2016 12 21 Strathern Marilyn 1988 The Gender of the Gift Problems with Women and Problems with Society in Melanesia Berkeley University of California Press pp 143 147 Thomas Nicholas 1991 Entangled Objects Exchange Material Culture and Colonialism in the Pacific Cambridge MA Harvard University Press a b c Lewis Hyde The Gift Imagination and the Erotic Life of Property pg 18 Everett Daniel L Aug Oct 2005 Cultural Constraints on Grammar and Cognition in Piraha Another Look at the Design Features of Human Language Current Anthropology 46 4 621 646 doi 10 1086 431525 hdl 2066 41103 S2CID 2223235 Curren Erik 2012 Charles Eisenstein wants to devalue your money to save the economy Transition Voice Retrieved 9 February 2013 Eisenstein Charles 2007 2 The Ascent of Humanity Harrisburg PA Pananthea Press ISBN 978 0977622207 Archived from the original on 2013 02 07 Retrieved 9 February 2013 Graeber David 2001 Marcel Mauss Revisited Toward an Anthropological Theory of Value Basingstoke Palgrave p 153 Gregory C A 1982 Gifts and Commodities London Academic Press p 53 Gregory C A 1982 Gifts and Commodities London Academic Press pp 53 54 Sahlins Marshall 1963 Poor Man Rich Man Big Man Chief Political Types in Melanesia and Polynesia Comparative Studies in Society and History 3 5 3 294 297 doi 10 1017 s0010417500001729 S2CID 145254059 Tana Toraja official website in Indonesian Archived from the original on May 29 2006 Retrieved 2006 10 04 a b c Schrauwers Albert 2004 H h ouses E e states and class On the importance of capitals in central Sulawesi Bijdragen tot de Taal Land en Volkenkunde 160 1 83 86 doi 10 1163 22134379 90003735 S2CID 128968473 Graeber David 2011 Debt The first 5 000 years New York Melville House pp 223 249 ISBN 978 1933633862 Bowie Katherine 1998 The Alchemy of Charity Of class and Buddhism in Northern Thailand American Anthropologist 100 2 469 481 doi 10 1525 aa 1998 100 2 469 Bowie Katherine 1998 The Alchemy of Charity Of class and Buddhism in Northern Thailand American Anthropologist 100 2 473 474 doi 10 1525 aa 1998 100 2 469 Bowie Katherine 1998 The Alchemy of Charity Of class and Buddhism in Northern Thailand American Anthropologist 100 2 475 477 doi 10 1525 aa 1998 100 2 469 Schrauwers Albert 2009 Union is Strength W L Mackenzie The Children of Peace and the Emergence of Joint Stock Democracy in Upper Canada Toronto University of Toronto Press pp 97 124 Rus Andrej 2008 Gift vs commoditiy debate revisited Anthropological Notebooks 14 1 81 102 Organs For Sale China s Growing Trade and Ultimate Violation of Prisoners Rights June 27 2001 Retrieved February 12 2019 Schepper Hughes Nancy 2000 The Global Traffic in Human Organs Current Anthropology 41 2 193 doi 10 1086 300123 S2CID 23897844 a b Schepper Hughes Nancy 2000 The Global Traffic in Human Organs Current Anthropology 41 2 191 224 doi 10 1086 300123 PMID 10702141 S2CID 23897844 Sharp Lesley A 2000 The Commodification of the Body and its Parts Annual Review of Anthropology 29 303 doi 10 1146 annurev anthro 29 1 287 PMID 15977341 Tober Diane M 2001 Semen as Gift Semen as Goods Reproductive Workers and the Market in Altruism Body amp Society 7 2 3 137 160 doi 10 1177 1357034x0100700205 S2CID 145687310 Titmuss Richard 1997 The Gift Relationship From human blood to social policy New York The New Press Silvestri P The All too Human Welfare State Freedom Between Gift and Corruption Teoria e critica della regolazione sociale 2 2019 pp 123 145 DOI https doi org 10 7413 19705476007 Bird David Nurit Darr Asaf 2009 Commodity gift and mass gift on gift commodity hybrids in advanced mass consumption cultures Economy and Society 38 2 304 325 doi 10 1080 03085140902786777 S2CID 143729708 John Campbell McMillian Paul Buhle 2003 The new left revisited Temple University Press pp 112 ISBN 978 1566399760 Retrieved 28 December 2011 Lytle Mark Hamilton 2005 America s Uncivil Wars The Sixties Era from Elvis to the Fall of Richard Nixon Oxford University Press pp 213 215 ISBN 978 0190291846 Overview who were are the Diggers The Digger Archives Retrieved 2007 06 17 Gail Dolgin Vicente Franco 2007 American Experience The Summer of Love PBS Archived from the original on 2017 03 25 Retrieved 2007 04 23 What is Burning Man FAQ Preparation Retrieved 10 5 11 a b How We Survive The Currency of Giving Encore Making Contact produced by National Radio Project December 21 2010 The 10 Principles of Burning Man Burning Man Retrieved 2019 05 02 Gifting It A Burning Embrace of Gift Economy retrieved 2019 05 02 a b Joy to the weed Marijuana legalization comes bearing gifts Associated Press December 21 2017 via The Seattle Times Barro Josh 20 March 2015 Can Washington s Gift Economy in Marijuana Work The New York Times The Rolling State to Legal Pot Washington D C Rolling Stone 2018 04 25 Retrieved 2018 06 19 Ab Hanna September 29 2017 Will Vermont Be the Next State to Legalize Marijuana High Times The current Vermont bill does not allow for the retail sale of cannabis So if it goes forward with a legal market it would be similar to that of District of Columbia Tuttle Brad June 29 2015 Oregon Is Celebrating Marijuana Legalization With Free Weed Time Archived from the original on January 21 2022 Retrieved July 2 2015 Joshua Miller December 14 2016 It s official Marijuana is legal in Massachusetts Boston Globe Giving away up to an ounce of the drug without remuneration or public advertisement is OK Gifting pot and then receiving payment later or reciprocal gifts of pot and items of value illegal Hilary Bricken December 23 2017 What are California s cannabis laws Green State blog Mutual Aid A Factor of Evolution 1955 paperback reprinted 2005 includes Kropotkin s 1914 preface Foreword and Bibliography by Ashley Montagu and The Struggle for Existence by Thomas H Huxley ed Boston Extending Horizons Books Porter Sargent Publishers ISBN 0875580246 Project Gutenberg e text Project LibriVox audiobook Augustin Souchy A Journey Through Aragon in Sam Dolgoff ed The Anarchist Collectives ch 10 Turner Francis J 2005 Canadian encyclopedia of social work Waterloo Ont Wilfrid Laurier University Press pp 337 338 ISBN 0889204365 Thompson Edward P 1991 Customs in Common New York New Press pp 341 ISBN 978 1565840034 Thompson Edward 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Technica Retrieved August 8 2008 Mackaay Ejan 1990 Economic Incentives in Markets for Information and Innovation Harvard Journal of Law amp Public Policy 13 909 867 910 Heylighen Francis 2007 Why is Open Access Development so Successful In B Lutterbeck M Barwolff R A Gehring eds Open Source Jahrbuch Lehmanns Media Markus Giesler Consumer Gift Systems Homesteading the Noosphere catb org Retrieved 2019 05 02 Suehle Ruth An anthropologist s view of an open source community opensource com Archived from the original on 15 March 2012 Retrieved 19 March 2012 Free Libre and Open Source Software Survey and Study International Institute of Infonomics University of Maastricht and Berlecon Research GmbH 2002 Archived from the original on 21 August 2012 Retrieved 19 March 2012 Matzan Jem 5 June 2004 The gift economy and free software Archived from the original on 12 July 2012 Retrieved 3 April 2012 IDC Linux Ecosystem Worth 40 Billion by 2010 Archived from the original on 2012 07 16 Retrieved 2012 04 07 Chapter 2 Debian package management www debian org Retrieved 2019 05 09 D Anthony S W Smith and T Williamson Explaining quality in internet collective goods zealots and good samaritans in the case of Wikipedia THanover Dartmouth College Technical Report November 2005 Anthony Denise Smith Sean W Williamson Tim April 2007 The Quality of Open Source Production Zealots and Good Samaritans in the Case of Wikipedia PDF Technical Report TR2007 606 Dartmouth College archived from the original PDF on 2011 06 06 retrieved 2011 05 29Further reading editThe concept of a gift economy has played a large role in works of fiction about alternative societies especially in works of science fiction Examples include News from Nowhere 1890 by William Morris is a utopian novel about a society which operates on a gift economy The Great Explosion 1962 by Eric Frank Russell describes the encounter of a military survey ship and a Gandhian pacifist society that operates as a gift economy The Dispossessed 1974 by Ursula K Le Guin is a novel about a gift economy society that had exiled themselves from their capitalist home planet The Mars trilogy a series of books written by Kim Stanley Robinson in the 1990s suggests that new human societies that develop away from Earth could migrate toward a gift economy The movie Pay It Forward 2000 centers on a schoolboy who for a school project comes up with the idea of doing a good deed for another and then asking the recipient to pay it forward Although the phrase gift economy is never explicitly mentioned the scheme would in effect create one Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom 2003 by Cory Doctorow describes future society where rejuvenation and body enhancement have made death obsolete and material goods are no longer scarce resulting in a reputation based whuffie economic system Wizard s Holiday 2003 by Diane Duane describes two young wizards visiting a utopian like planet whose economy is based on gift giving and mutual support Voyage from Yesteryear 1982 by James P Hogan describes a society of the embryo colonists of Alpha Centauri who have a post scarcity gift economy Cradle of Saturn 1999 and its sequel The Anguished Dawn 2003 by James P Hogan describe a colonization effort on Saturn s largest satellite Both describe the challenges involved in adopting a new economic paradigm Science fiction author Bruce Sterling wrote a story Maneki neko in which the cat paw gesture is the sign of a secret AI based gift economy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gift economy amp oldid 1204674803, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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