Today the fragmentation and complexification of needs no longer fins satisfaction nor in the public welfare system nor in the private market. This condition has opened to the rising of collective and cooperative sharing practices to balance this gap and to build new connections among citizens and with the space. The phenomenon has been observed in several European cities and consists of a wide variety of experiences able to modify the space building a new urban geography made of lumps characterized by flexible boundaries no longer inscribed in traditional dualism private-public. To understand the complexity of this urban geography it seems appropriate to refer to more stinging categories coming from the economic discipline.
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