OUR WORK & PROGRAMS

EDUCATION & TRAINING

We offer political education, training, and leadership development to effectively build, grow, and sustain local solidarity economies.

TRAININGS & EVENTS

SOLIDARITY ECONOMY 101

What’s an “economy,” anyway? How do we manage the resources we have collectively? And what does a people-centered solidarity economy look like?

CARE FOR THE PEOPLE

If we are to resist policies of violence and economies of war what are our alternatives? How can we encourage collective consciousness and reject apathy and individualism? 

RESOURCE LIBRARY

The NEC resource library is a broad collection of toolkits, curricula, stories, maps, podcasts and more that represent key apsects of solidarity economy principles, history, and practice. We see this as a living resource, which will continue to grow and evolve based on the interests of NEC members and the wider public.

EDUCATORS CONNECT WORKING GROUP

The Educators Working Group supports individual educators as a community of practice and deepens and makes accessible educational resources for the Solidarity Economy movement as a community of practice.

MEMBER TRAININGS

As a learning organization, we’re committed to ongoing political education and training. We’re organizing regular in-house trainings for our members and offering scholarships with key training training partners. Past offerings have included Economics for Emancipation and Training for Social Action Trainers (TSAT) with training for change. 

RECENT RESOURCES & TRAININGS

Resource List: Solidarity Economies in Latin America

Many of the strongest examples we have of real solidarity economies – where communities are meeting their own needs outside of capitalist systems – come out of social movements in Latin America,  and the communities who have carried those traditions of cooperation across borders. 

Resource List: Solidarity Economies in Latin America

Many of the strongest examples we have of real solidarity economies – where communities are meeting their own needs outside of capitalist systems – come out of social movements in Latin America,  and the communities who have carried those traditions of cooperation across borders.