Think Globally, Act Locally?

Think Globally, Act Locally?

Progressive, locally rooted movements have long proven their ability to influence wider social and political trends, whether by force of example, concerted political pressure, or active resistance to centralized power.

We print this with this caveat: This is good article and an orientation we wholeheartedly agree with. But, a few corrections need to be made to this article for the historical record. Cooperation Jackson did not start the Jackson People's Assembly, nor have we run candidates in Jackson. This was done by the Malcolm X Grassroots Movement and executed largely through the People's Assembly Task Force. As part and parcel of the struggle to execute the Jackson-Kush Plan, Cooperation Jackson did start the Human Rights Institute and has conducted Human Rights Budgeting Assemblies. But, we have to give credit where credit is due so the history is clear and concise.


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Community Controlled Economies Drive Systems Change

Community Controlled Economies Drive Systems Change

Time and again it has been the radical political imagination of grassroots leaders from marginalized communities armed with the truth of their lived experience who have confronted oppressive systems through building collective power that allows for community-controlled systems to take root. Communities across the country — like Buffalo, New York, Springfield, Massachusetts, and Jackson, Mississippi — are organizing for a New Economy that centers people on the front lines of environmental degradation and economic disenfranchisement (byproducts of a capitalist system that prioritizes profit motive above all else).

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A Cross-Atlantic Plan to Break Capital's Control

A Cross-Atlantic Plan to Break Capital's Control

An article in Jacobin Magazine focusing on efforts to democratize the economy by the Bernie Sanders campaign and the Labor Party in the United Kingdom under the leadership of Jeremy Corbyn.

Written by Peter Gowan and Mathew Lawrence

“Bernie Sanders’s plan for worker-owned funds isn’t just notable because it could lead us toward a democratized, sustainable, socialist economy. It’s also the product of a growing collaboration between the Left in the United States and the United Kingdom.” - From Jacobin Magazine


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Can the Working Class Change the World? Interview with Michael D. Yates on WRFG Labor Forum

Can the Working Class Change the World? Interview with Michael D. Yates on WRFG Labor Forum

Michael D. Yates, economist, labor educator, and associate editor of the socialist magazine Monthly Review, discusses his new book, Can the Working Class Change the World?, on WRFG Labor Forum on March 11, 2019. In this interview Yates discusses aspects of our vision and our efforts to build worker cooperatives as instruments of working class power and self-organization.

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