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Cooperatives
"If the cotton lord and the millionaire come here and hire you to build
factories, . . . when the factory is erected they own it, and they set their
price upon your labor and your wool or cotton--they have dominion over you.
But, if by your own efforts and exertions, you cooperate together and build
a factory, it is your own. . . . The profits are divided among those whose labor
produced it, and will be used to build up the country. Hence, it is not capital
that is, it is not so much money that is needed. It is unity of effort on the
part of the bone, sinew, skill and ingenuity which we have in our midst."
--- Apostle George A. Smith on the Provo Woolen Mills
Producer cooperatives are an old form of worker ownership that began with the
ideas of Robert Owen in Scotland, the Mormon pioneers in the 1830s to 1870s,
and the Rochdale co-op founded in England in the 1840s. Today over 800 million
people around the globe are members of housing co-ops, food co-ops, etc. They
may work in high-tech manufacturing co-ops or in large scale agricultural co-ops.
From the Basque workers' cooperative complex, Mondragón, in Northern
Spain, a sophisticated complex with 60,000 worker-owners, to farmers' co-ops
in Kenya and Bolivia, the cooperative movement is growing. Over the past three
decades, I've enjoyed consulting with, and/or carrying out research on co-ops
in over 20 countries.
In the contemporary scene across Canada and the U.S., Britain, France and Scandinavia,
throughout Africa, Asia, and Latin America, there are thousands of financial
co-ops such as credit unions, cooperative universities and schools at all levels,
retail co-ops and software engineering co-ops--all are based on the radical
idea that collaboration yields greater synergy than individualism and competition.
"The Next Stage of Mondragon: Innovations in Ownership by Workers." Chapter in Global Human Resources. ICFAI University Press, 2006.
Worker Cooperatives From the 20th Century to the New Millenium: The Rise
of Social Enterprises, Canadian Cooperative Center, Toronto, Canada, 2004,
208 pages.
"Re-Steeling The U.S.",
Worker Coops, Vol. 8, No. 4, Spring 1989, pp. 13-16. Reprinted in Employee
Ownership: The United Steelworkers of America's Experience, USWA Research
Department, Pittsburgh, October 1989.
"The Third Stage of
Cooperation in the United States". Annals of Public and Co-operative
Economy, Vol. 56, No.3, 1984, pp. 239-252.
"Towards
a Labour Owned Economy in the United States". Labour and Society,
Vol. 6, No. 1, 1981, pp. 41-56.
"Forms
of Employee Ownership and Workers' Control". Sociology of Work and Occupations,
Vol. 8, No. 2, 1981, pp. 195-200.
"One becomes a cooperator through education and the practice of virtue.
. . . We need each other; we are called upon to complement each other. The man
who can stand solitude is either a god or a beast, as a celebrated philosopher
has stated. And this means that social classes need each other and should collaborate;
this means that the people and the authorities must not live divorced from each
other. This means that institutions must offer mutual aid, that we must sincerely
pursue what we claim, that is the common good, there is no reason for exclusivity.
. . . For this purpose it is not enough that the bosses undertake and do good
things. It is necessary that the workers participate in these things, so that
a real communion among them exists. It is not enough that the workers dream
of great reforms, if the bosses or entrepreneurs do not contribute to their
realization, providing their zeal, their technical knowledge and skills, their
experience. . . . Where this fusion and spontaneous and generous collaboration
has not been achieved, there is no real social life, and . . . peaceable relations
will be superficial or fictitious."
--- Don Jose Maria Arizmendiarrieta, Catholic priest and
mentor to the Mondragon Cooperative System
Cooperative Links
International Co-operative Alliance (ICA)
Committee for the Promotion and Advancement
of Cooperatives
Cooperative Life
Digital Workers' Co-op
Sobey School
of Business
Center for Cooperative
Studies
The ICA Group
National Cooperative Bank, U.S.
Coopnet
Kooperation Utan Granser
The Agricultural Cooperative
Union-Palestine
The Co-operative Retailing System in Western Canada
British Columbia Institute for Co-operative
Studies
Institute for the Research
on the Kibbutz and the Cooperative Idea
Kibbutz Industries Association
Kibbutzim Site
Kibbutz Lotan, Arava Valley,
Israel
North American Students of Cooperation
CoBank
Cornell University
Cooperative Enterprise Program
Centre for the Study of Co-operatives
- University of Saskatchewan
British Columbia Institute for Co-operative
Studies
National Cooperative Business
Association (NCBA)
Cooperative Organization
Mondragón Corporación
Cooperativa
The Ohio Cooperative Development
Center
Land O'Lakes, Inc.
World Council of Credit Unions
ACDI
VOCA
The
Cooperative Branch-ILO
COPAC
Co-operative Insurance
Farmcare
Co-operative Pharmarcy
Priory Motor Group
SYNCRO
The Co-operative Bank, U.K.
The Co-operative Group
Oxford, Swindon, and Gloucester
Co-op
"Labor can and will become its own employer through cooperative associations....What
I believe is, the time has come when the laboring men can perform for themselves
the office of becoming their own employers....[They] possess sufficient intelligence...to
enjoy the entire benefits of their own labor."
--- Leland Stanford, founder of the U.S. Central Pacific
Railroad and Stanford University, California Governor and U.S. Senator
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