STIR issue 16, Winter 2017: Solidaity Economics

Site de l’éditeur

AA.VV., Stir to Action, janvier 2017

Solidarity Economics

This issue was co-produced with the team at the Institute for Solidarity Economics.

Climate Column—James Angel

« Switched On London—a coalition of environmentalists, trade unions and community organisations—campaigns on municipal energy in London, advancing a vision premised upon clean energy, social justice and democracy. »

Commons Column—Robert Raymond

« BroodFonds is an insurance-like facility for self-employed individuals. The idea is simple: freelancers get together in small groups and put aside money each month. If any of the members are unable to work for an extended period—usually more than 30 days—they are supported financially by the rest of the group. »

The Solidarity Economy—Mike Lewis

« Co-operatives, credit unions, some forms of community economic development, community land trusts, trade unions, fairtrade, non-profit associations, and charities—all are intended, to an extent, to defend people, communities, and regions that have been marginalised by ideology, market failure, and inadequate public policy. »

Coders, Commoners and Co-operators— Bob Thorp, Jack Thorp, Richard Dillon

« Co-operatively owned platforms emerged before the movement was named and is seen by some as a positive legacy of the Occupy Movement. Founding applications can be traced to Fairmondo 2012, a German co-operatively owned online marketplace supporting “responsible consumption” and kicking back against corrupt and extractive platforms. »

Interview—Jessica Gordon Nembhard

« The other thing about the relationship between co-ops and civil rights groups was that some Black liberation organisations kept their members fed and earned money to continue their political work by engaging in co-operative work and collective ownership. The Black Panther Party, which maybe some don’t think of as a civil rights group but it was, used co-operative economic activity so their members can actually volunteer in the Party. »

Childcare Co-ops—Amy Martin

« Working together as a team from different backgrounds—policy, the creative sector, product and service design, respectively—we have designed a prototype operating model and digital service called Kidoop. The service, envisioned as a web app, would allow parents to group together to form a childcare co-operative. »

Catalan Solidarity Economy—Steve Matthews

« The Catalan Solidarity Economy is booming. The 190 member organisations of the Catalan Solidarity Economy Network have a combined turnover of 165m euros and employ 4,000 people across a range of sectors. Over 21,000 people attended the Network’s fifth annual fair in Barcelona in October 2016. »

Solidarity Map of the UK—Emma Charleston

Growing Co-operative Housing - Gauthier Guerin

« Radical Routes’ new model facilitates existing co-ops to work together in terms of sharing finances, human resources and expertise through creating small-scale secondary co-operatives, or “Co-op Clusters”. Each cluster would operate as a confederated mutual-aid network to manage the provision of housing to its members and to support the creation of new housing co-ops. »

Ours to Own and Hack—Oliver Sylvester-Bradley

« The simple claim of platform co-ops is that if ‘we the people’ own and democratically control the platforms we use we all get a better deal; without external investors extracting value every quarter, it can be recycled within the platform so that workers get paid more (and, most importantly, a real living wage), users get better value, and together we set the rules. »

Linking it all Together—Dan Whiteley & Natalie Bradley

« Data can be used for good, ill, and is usually used for both. But to organise people, or for people to organise themselves, information needs to be accessible. The way in which the data is collected and made available, and which data is considered important has a strong influence over whether it benefits people, or exploits them. »

Democratic Confederalism—Ercan Ayboga & Michel Knapp

« The American Libertarian Socialist and Ecologist, Murray Bookchin, defined the ideal economy as a municipally led, moral economy that is under democratic control. He argued that the Communes’ control over the economy represents the highest developed form of Confederalism. These same principles are being applied in the economy in Rojava, the mainly Kurdish, autonomous regions of Northern Syria. »

BuyTwitter and Beyond—Danny Spitzberg

« In September 2016 they started looking for someone to buy the whole company. A few weeks later, The Guardian ran an article by co-op scholar Nathan Schneider proposing to save Twitter from Wall Street through shared ownership. Readers with wickedly different politics rallied together, and #BuyTwitter came to life. »

Review—Surviving the Future: Culture, Carnival and Capital in the aftermath of the Market Economy —Jonny Gordon-Farleigh

« In Surviving the Future, Fleming creates scenarios not forecasts of the future, and we will not need revisions, he tells us, but a “complete rewrite.” This edited collection makes a call to the potential of imagination, not instruction, suggests building a culture to “activate citizen’s intelligence,” not a legislative path towards “green authoritarianism.”