
Building the Solidarity Economy by Boosting Black-Owned Co-ops
In Oakland, CA, Black community activists are combining Pan-African liberatory visions with business and legal skills to build a network of Black co-ops.
In Oakland, CA, Black community activists are combining Pan-African liberatory visions with business and legal skills to build a network of Black co-ops.
In Washington, DC, a network of cooperatives is emerging. The organizing extends beyond supporting worker co-ops to building a network of mutual aid and support.
Buffalo residents have long had to do for themselves. Increasingly, “doing for themselves” means building cooperatives.
Corporate-dominated Los Angeles might seem an unlikely site for the emergence of a bottom-up solidarity economy. But bit by bit, the seemingly impossible is happening.
On December 6th, NEC members CEANYC and NYC NoWC co-hosted an event for NYC cooperators to explore the connections between the solidarity economy and the growing movement for a Free Palestine.
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