• How we can create enjoyable, socially-inclusive, democratically managed jobs, enterprises, co-operatives and other forms of formal and informal economic organisation in a climate and resource constrained world?
• How do we define what it means to live the sort of life we want to live, while understanding that climate change and resource constraint issues need to be recognised?
• How do we identify what we need and what we should produce?
• What is enjoyable, convivial, democratically-controlled work, as opposed to exploitative useless toil?
• How do we maintain and enable to flourish that which we hold in common and all depend on: wider ecosystems, social services, civic life, community?
• What does it mean to create wealth, to be entrepreneurial? How can we develop new, social and collective understandings of wealth creation?
• Are markets always capitalist, always illogical, prone to crisis and unequal rewards – or good allocation mechanisms? Can we reconfigure markets so they work to different rhythms?
• Can we change the world without taking power? What are the possibilities and limits of grassroots action? Is this a naïve suggestion?
• What is the role of the state? Can the state facilitate, rather than co-opt, grassroots action? Should we change the world by taking power? Do social democratic models in Scandinavian countries get the ballence beween civil society and a supportive state, underpin by public spending, right?
• Are social democratic governments better or worse at working with civil society, without co-opting them? Paradoxically, are there more opportunities for grassroots change under neoliberal governments where citizens are expected to fend for themselves more? Or in the latter case, is this just a cover for privatisation, with social/solidarity economy organisations being set up to fail?
• What are the best conceptual and theoretical tools for thinking these issues through?
Monday, 7 November 2011
Sunday, 6 November 2011
Jose Luis Coraggio

Heloisa Primavera

Dario Azzellini

Saturday, 5 November 2011
Adrian Smith

John Barry

Friday, 4 November 2011
Participatory Economy in Argentina
The following images are from Pete's research visits in Argentina. The first two illustrate the use of community currencies: the patacones, issued by regional authorities, and the trueque, the true community currencies issued by the people themselves.


The following two images show the participatory politics that developed after the Argentinazo, the opening up of Argentinian politics following the financial crisis of 2001. Popular assemblies like these planned street protests and the occupation of factories.


Meanwhile people's needs for subsistence were being met through the local markets where exchange took place using the community currencies.


The following two images show the participatory politics that developed after the Argentinazo, the opening up of Argentinian politics following the financial crisis of 2001. Popular assemblies like these planned street protests and the occupation of factories.


Meanwhile people's needs for subsistence were being met through the local markets where exchange took place using the community currencies.

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