Powered by Bravenet Bravenet Blog

Subscribe to Journal

Tag Board

Tovah: Good Day. Without the capacity to provide its own information, the mind drifts into randomness.I am from Micronesia and also now am reading in English, give please true I wrote the following sentence: "Many different styles to choose from."Thank :o Tovah.
Scot: Excuse me. What children take from us, they give?We become people who feel more deeply, question more deeply, hurt more deeply, and love more deeply. Help me! There is an urgent need for sites: Lowes bathroom mirrors. I found only this - christian counseling debt relief. I do this just after the wall is framed so the plumber and electrician can see it. Discount codes, voucher codes and promotional codes to save you money. Thank you very much :-). Scot from Nicaragua.
lamkhie: visiting your lovely blog :)
Pam: Just blog hopping and thought that I'd say "HI!"
John Médaille: I am proud to announce the publication of my book, The Vocation of Business: Social Justice in the Marketplace, by Continuum International.The overriding theme of this book is that the original unity of distributive and corrective justice that prevailed in both economics and moral discourse until the 16th and seventeenth centuries was shattered by the rise of an individualistic capitalism that relied on corrective justice (justice in exchange) alone. But an economics that lacks a distributive pr
Gen: Welcome!

Please type in the four characters shown in the black box.

Wednesday, August 26th 2009

8:59 AM

Article on Mondragon Corp-" a town without poverty" (or, how distributism can work)

(part 1 of videos, have not viewd it, let me know how good-or bad-it is.Poster is a distrib)

Spanish Town without Poverty

Released: 1/19/2000 12:00 AM EST
Source:
Long Island University

View related Newswise articles on co-ops.
http://www.newswise.com/articles/view/17012

Newswise Noted poverty expert and Southampton College of Long Island University sociology professor Barbara Peters brought a class to Mondragon, Spain, a corporation and cooperation town. Peters has studied the area for over a decade and spent part of this past summer there. She hopes the Mondragon model could be used to fight poverty in this country.

"In Mondragon, I saw no signs of poverty. I saw no signs of extreme wealth," Peters said. "I saw people looking out for each other."

Mondragon is located in Basque Country of the Pyrenees Mountains. Since 1956, a group of worker-owned manufacturing and supportive businesses, including a technical college, have been in operation there. The corporate values of the Mondragon Corporacion Cooperative are cooperation and solidarity. Of its 28,000 residents, 24,000 have bought into it, sharing profits from the town's commerce. Peters' class visited the main offices of the corporation and attended two days of seminars to learn how it is organized.

"What I want to find out is if it can work here," Peters said. "There are people in the U.S. who are economically abandoned. In places like the inner city, this could be both community building and economy building."

Students conducted research January 10-20 in Mondragon observing how the experience of worker ownership impacts the social life of the city.

Peters first heard about the Mondragon model 12 years ago and has been fascinated with it since. It's a caring form of capitalism, she said. "It's profit-making, but the workers make the profit. They buy into it, and can get loans to do so from a cooperative bank. ... My recent trip there was just incredible."

A former Head Start mother who fought her way from poverty to earn her Ph.D., Peters now teaches sociology and women's studies at Southampton College. Her first in a series of books on the children of poverty, The Head Start Mother: Low-Income Mothers' Empowerment Through Participation (Garland), was published in 1998

0 total marks / Comments

Wednesday, August 26th 2009

6:40 AM

The Big Empty Box (Store)

(Part 1-see the site to order copy http://www.walmartmovie.com/) Also, google site:  http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-3836296181471292925

The Big Empty Box (Store)

Stacey Mitchell of The Institute for Local Self-Reliance reports that empty big-box stores are about to join the foreclosed homestead as a defining feature of the American economic landscape:

Within a few months, more than one-eighth of the country's retail space will be sitting vacant, according to some estimates. That's about 1.4 billion square feet, or 50 square miles, of empty store space, ringed by roughly 150 square miles of useless parking lot.

It will be tempting to blame the weak economy for all of this wreckage. But the recession has merely been the trigger. This avalanche of vacant retail, much like the mortgage crisis, has been a long time in the making.

Since the early 1990s, the pace of retail development has far outstripped growth in spending. Between 1990 and 2005, the amount of store space in the United States doubled, ballooning from 19 to 38 square feet per person. Meanwhile, real consumer spending rose just 14 percent.

Stacey Mitchell is the author of Big-Box Swindle: The True Cost of Mega-Retailers and the Fight for America's Independent Businesses. which we reviewed here.

0 total marks / Comments