P2P Book of the Year 2014
Towards a Cooperative Commonwealth
- Humanizing the Economy. By John Restakis
* Learning from Cooperatives in the Global Crisis
- Book: Capital and the Debt Trap. Learning from Cooperatives in the Global Crisis. By Claudia Sanchez Bajo and Bruno Roelants. Palgrave MacMillan (2013)
URL = http://www.palgrave.com/products/title.aspx?pid=688814
"The recent financial crisis has had a devastating impact around the globe. Thousands of businesses have closed down and millions of jobs have been cut. Many people have lost their homes. Capital and the Debt Trap explains how key economies have fallen into a ‘debt trap’, linking the financial sphere to the real economy, and goes beyond, looking into alternatives to the constant stream of financial bubbles and shocks. Overlooked by many,cooperatives across the world have been relatively resilient throughout the crisis. Through four case studies (the transformation of a French industrial SME in crisis into a cooperative, a fishery cooperative in Mexico, the Desjardins Cooperative Group in Quebec and the Mondragon Group in the Basque country of Spain), the book explores their strategies and type of control, providing an in-depth analysis within a broader debate on wealth generation and a sustainable future."
Vandana Shiva:
"Both nature and society work on the principles of co-operation. In CAPITAL AND THE DEBT TRAP - Learning from Cooperatives in the Global Crisis Bruno Roelants and Claudia Sanchez Bajo show us how an economy based on co-operation can address the deep crisis we face.”
- e-Book: Democratic Wealth: Building a Citizens' Economy. Ed. by Stuart White, and Niki Sethi-Smith. openDemocracy and Politics in Spires, 2014
URL = http://www.scribd.com/doc/211019686/Democratic-Wealth [edit]Description
"Democratic Wealth' is a collection of essays that challenges the poverty of thinking around economic policy, particularly after the 2007 financial crash. It explores the renewed interest in republicanism and suggests this as a framework to shape an economy that serves the common good. It is a selection of articles from a series published by openDemocracy and Politics in Spires, a blog run by the universities of Oxford and Cambridge. The book is split into three parts. The first, Taking Back the Economy, features contributions from Philip Pettit, Thad Williamson, Joe Guinan, Jessica Kimpell and others on republican thinking and the market. The second, Republican Economy in Practice, looks at application around the globe, including contributions on cooperatives, sovereign wealth funds, basic income, tax fairness and green solutions and discusses how to develop these models at scale. In the third, Republican Politics, contributors including Quentin Skinner, Alex Gourevitch and Karma Nabulsi discuss the politics of republicanism, from challenging the surveillance state to democratising the workplace and harnessing the demands of new social movements for freedom from domination by the one per cent. It ends with an afterword by James Meadway, senior economist at nef, on clearing a path for a better future." (https://opendemocracy.net/ourkingdom/opendemocracy/democratic-wealth-free-e-book)
check: Creating a Sustainable and Desirable Future
The progressive Solidarity Economy
The Netarchical commons economy
- Zero Marginal Cost Society. By Jeremy Rifkin
Cultures of the Commmons
- Think Like a Commoner. By David Bollier
- Monastic Rules as Form-of-Life. Giorgio Agamben.
Reinventing Organizations
The state in crisis vs. emerging new state forms
The Crisis
Constructing Commonfare
- Digital Solidarity. By Felix Stadler.
Networked Labor
Protocol Wars
Reconstructing Equality
- Capital in the Twenty-First Century. By Thomas Piketty.
Reconstructing the Urban Commons
Smart Cities and their critique
Collective Action After Networks
- Collective Action After Networks. By Rodrigo Nunes.