Degrowth Strategies: Thinking with and beyond Erik Olin Wright

Degrowth Strategies: Thinking with and beyond Erik Olin Wright

By Carol Bardi, Jacob Smessaert, Joe Herbert, Nathan Barlow, originally published by Degrowth.de

Resilient

October 25,2021

Degrowthers have recently seemed to find a lot of inspiration in Erik Olin Wright’s framework of political strategies for transformations beyond capitalism. In this blog post, we wish to highlight some crucial insufficiencies of Wright’s framework in relation to degrowth transformations, and propose some adaptations which can enhance its utility for further strategy discussions. To do so, we begin by offering a brief overview of some ways in which degrowthers have discussed Wright’s strategic framework so far. We then propose three ways in which we believe Wright’s framework can be enhanced in order to speak more fruitfully to degrowth. These consist of (i) a reconsideration of ruptural strategies, (ii) a greater attentiveness to the dynamics of contemporary ecological crisis, and (iii) a deeper recognition of possibilities for the inter-mingling of different political traditions in order to develop novel strategic frameworks for twenty-first century degrowth transformations.

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Building bridges from intersectional EcoSocialism to Radical Climate Justice and Systemic Transformation

Building bridges from intersectional EcoSocialism to Radical Climate Justice and Systemic Transformation

Written by John Foran

Resilience

October 14, 2021

This article addresses the intersections and overlaps of intersectional theory, ecosocialism, and radical climate justice activism. It argues for a new synthesis between these different viewpoints and paradigms and features the work of Cooperation Jackson as model of practice.

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Organizing the Solidarity Economy: A Story of Network Building amid COVID-19

Organizing the Solidarity Economy: A Story of Network Building amid COVID-19

Written by Steve Dubb

Non-profit Quarterly

September 15, 2021

This article comes from the Summer 2021 edition of the Nonprofit Quarterly, “The World We Want: In Search of New Economic Paradigms.”

Early in 2020, the board of the U.S. Solidarity Economy Network (USSEN) called on like-minded organizations that were engaged in economic justice and systems change work to gather at a Resist and Build summit at the Highlander Research and Education Center in New Market, Tennessee. The center, founded in 1932, has played an outsized role as a movement-organizing space, known for helping to train labor organizers in the 1930s and civil rights organizers in the 1950s and 1960s.

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The Big Scary "S" word and economic democracy

The Big Scary "S" word and economic democracy

This is a recording of a live event that took place on September 14th.

Dissent partnered with the Democratic Socialists of America Fund, NYC-DSA’s Housing Working Group, In These Times, Housing Justice for All, Dollars & Sense, and the Sustainable Economies Law Center for the third installment in a series of virtual events inspired by the film The Big Scary “S” Word.

This discussion focused on worker cooperatives and the fight for economic justice.

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Imaginal Cells of the Solidarity Economy

Imaginal Cells of the Solidarity Economy

Written by Emily Kawano

Nonprofit Quarterly

September 8, 2021

This article comes from the Summer 2021 edition of the Nonprofit Quarterly, “The World We Want: In Search of New Economic Paradigms.”

The discovery of imaginal cells, or discs, goes back to the 1600s, but the metaphor of imaginal cells was popularized by Norie Huddle in her 1990 book Butterfly. The story of a butterfly’s metamorphosis provides a lovely and useful metaphor for the metamorphosis from a system of capitalism to a postcapitalist system: the solidarity economy (SE).

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Cooperatives can make economies more resilient to crisis like COVID-19

Cooperatives can make economies more resilient to crisis like COVID-19

By Katherine K. Chen and Victor Tan Chen

Fortune Magazine

May 19, 2021

With customers staying at home during the pandemic, large numbers of businesses have shuttered permanently, unable to cover their payroll and rent. Emergency governmental assistance has sustained some businesses during this period of economic uncertainty, but the crisis has also stoked interest in a private sector remedy: cooperatives.

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Local Food and Farms Coop Assembly 2021 Keynote Plenary Panel

Local Food and Farms Coop Assembly 2021 Keynote Plenary Panel

Our opening Keynote panel at our Assembly features a conversation of food sovereignty and a Just Transition in our pandemic times with speakers from across the continent. We are honoured to open our 12th Annual Assembly with Dawn Morrison of the Working Group on Indigenous Food Sovereignty from Coast Salish territory on the west coast of so-called Canada as well as Kali Akuno and Sacajawea Saki Hall of Cooperation Jackson from Jackson, Mississippi. Our speakers discuss what food sovereignty looks like in their communities, coalition building across nations and movements, and mobilizing to activate the changes we need to see for a Just Transition away from an extractive economy to sustainable, long-term, community-driven solutions.

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Defining Climate Justice + Labor Justice Webinar

Defining Climate Justice + Labor Justice Webinar

This webinar is an introduction on labor organizing and how it interacts with many aspects of the environmental justice movement, such as how right-to-work legislation and other union busting efforts or hampering work affect the climate justice movement. Panelists also discussed the connections between the current labor organizers and mutual aid organizers in the youth environmental movement.

Featuring Joshua Dedmond of Cooperation Jackson and the Labor Network for Sustainability.


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