Networking & Collaboration
Plural Economies
Old GEO Yahoo Group
Submitted by WilliamCerf on July 19, 2008 - 9:49pm.Several years ago a group fo folks started a GEO group on Yahoo groups. Over the years different people acted as custodians/ownsers of the group. It was passed on to me a couple of years ago.
Since we have this forum, I'd like to delete that one. There has been no activity in a very long time. I will post one message to it suggesting that folks come to this website.
If I don't hear any objections, I'll delete the Yahoo group in about a month. Please post a reply if you have any thoughts.
Cheers,
William Cerf
Brooklyn, NY
Co-ops Unite to Support Worker-Ownership in Home Care
Past issues of GEO have reported on the emergence of a particular type of worker cooperative, the home care cooperative. In the 1980s, the federal government followed the lead of state governments like Wisconsin and acknowledged that elderly and disabled people who need help in day-to-day living are best served by in-home assistance. Medicare and Medicaid funding that would have otherwise been used only for nursing homes would now be applicable to home care services. With "the gray tsunami" of aging baby boomers looming, demand is only going to increase for the next few decades.
Cascadia Hour Exchange Goes Public
Co-op As Alternative to "Take a Leak" Economics
The Seed
Linking Post-Capitalist Alternatives
Valley Alliance of Worker Cooperatives (W. Mass and Southern VT)
Networking & Collaboration | Worker CooperativesSearching For the Next Cooperative Principle
In 1995, the International Cooperative Alliance adopted seven cooperative principles to define and guide cooperatives throughout the world. Briefly stated, the "traditional seven" include: voluntary and open membership; democratic member control; member economic participation; autonomy and independence; education, training and information; cooperation among cooperatives; and concern for community.
A Strategy for Unions and Coops: Toward Building A Labor-Ownership Economy
Both Hands in the Soil
There is an ethical imperative to shift the balance of economic power away from corporate Capitalism and toward economies that benefit us all. Beginning with this assumption, I will explain how it is possible for unions and worker cooperatives to collaborate strategically to take market share away from absentee-owned and wage labor capitalist enterprises and place control of resources and production in the hands of communities of working people.
