Civic Renewal and the Commons
of Cyberspace
Peter Levine
This article brings together two current discussions. One—which is already
familiar to readers of the National Civic Review—concerns the somewhat shaky
condition of American civil society. The other investigates the Internet as a par-
ticular kind of public resource, a “commons.” By bringing these discussions
together, I hope to stimulate thinking about how the Internet might help to
revitalize civil society. I also want to draw attention to developments that are
threatening to spoil the Internet’s civic potential.
People who are concerned about America’s civil society believe that our
habits and skills of association have weakened over time. Robert Putnam and
others argue that joining associations and participating in loose cooperative
networks (especially those that unite diverse people) makes the economy more
efficient, introduces citizens to politics, increases the level of knowledge about
public issues, helps to solve social problems without high financial cost or gov-
ernment coercion, and even promotes psychological and physical health.
1
Some people doubt Putnam’s narrative portraying a decline in the health of
civil society, arguing that he has romanticized the civil society of the 1950s and
overlooked some contemporary strengths.
2
In my own view, the biggest prob-
lem is the deterioration of certain institutions that once helped ordinary peo-
ple wield power while generating broad discussion of public issues, especially
unions, political parties, civil rights organizations, and metropolitan daily
newspapers.
3
I am not convinced that we have found substitutes for these insti-
tutions. But even if our civil society is reasonably strong compared to past
decades, this is no reason for complacency. In each generation, it takes con-
scious effort to sustain old networks and associations and to bring new ones
to life.
The second discussion, regarding the Internet as a commons, may be less
familiar to readers of this journal. Some legal scholars and public-interest advo-
cates (and computer hackers) view the Internet as a resource that is neither
divided among separate property holders nor managed directly by the state.
In a commons, volunteers donate labor to sustain a shared property, deliber-
ate about its governance, and allow the whole community to reap its benefits.
NATIONAL CIVIC REVIEW, vol. 90, no. 3, Fall 2001 © John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 205