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Cooperativism at Work: Worker-owned Cooperatives Across the World [Pehme köide]

Edited by (International Co-operative Alliance)
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 490 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 960 g, 35 Tables, black and white; 8 Line drawings, black and white; 22 Halftones, black and white; 30 Illustrations, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 24-Feb-2026
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1041114273
  • ISBN-13: 9781041114277
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 490 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 960 g, 35 Tables, black and white; 8 Line drawings, black and white; 22 Halftones, black and white; 30 Illustrations, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 24-Feb-2026
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1041114273
  • ISBN-13: 9781041114277
Teised raamatud teemal:

The first of its kind, this book shows that enterprises owned and managed by their own staff as cooperatives, estimated to be over 300,000 in the world and to employ over 15 million people, can be economically sustainable in the long term and substantially contribute to community development.

Comprising 26 case studies, the book showcases how by providing membership and control to worker-member-owners and promoting community empowerment, worker-owned cooperatives have built sustainable businesses and fostered democratic decision-making across various sectors and geographies. The analysis emphasises the importance of education and training, capital accumulation facilitated by supportive regulatory frameworks and inter-cooperative systems (networks, agencies, federations and peer groups), and the role of worker cooperativism in promoting equality, community development and environmental sustainability. Worker and social cooperatives are well-positioned to address global challenges by promoting sustainable development, equality and community-centric solutions. Worker cooperativism has shown a strong capacity to innovate socially, but also technologically, including over the past few years, while providing high levels of employment security and welfare.

The book is of great use to practitioners within the cooperative movement, in particular the worker-members of worker and social cooperatives themselves, as well as developers of such cooperatives within the cooperative movement, but also among development NGOs and social movements.



The first of its kind, this book shows that enterprises owned and managed by their own staff as cooperatives, estimated to be over 300,000 in the world and to employ over 15 million people, can be economically sustainable in the long term and substantially contribute to community development.

Arvustused

"Our future lies in economic democracy and equal participation, not in oligarchy and plutocracy. This major book shows why this is possible and how this can be achieved. A must read".

Thomas Piketty, Professor of Economics at the School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences, Associate Chair at the Paris School of Economics (PSE) and Centennial Professor of Economics in the International Inequalities Institute at the London School of Economics (LSE)

"This book, beautifully edited by Bruno Roelants, is an important contribution that forces the reader to think. To address the grand challenges of present times, Cooperativism at Work suggests turning to an alternative economic system in which the prosocial inclination of economic agents are reinforced. The 32 authors from 15 countries provide compelling evidence that it is possible and well within our reach. Many efforts have been made in recent times to lay down the pillars of an economy based on the culture of care, true value creation, and solidarity as this book widely documents. Cooperativism at Work is a must read for all those academics, business leaders, policy-makers who are convincingly interested in triggering off a deliberate process of social reconfiguration of our market economies".

Stefano Zamagni, Professor of Economics, University of Bologna, Italy

"This important work presents case studies of worker coops around the world. Beyond providing invaluable information, it enables and stimulates crucial questions about alternative economic structures, past, present and future. Long yearned-for democratic re-organisations of workplaces are now on history's agenda, this time as worker cooperatives: preferred alternatives to capitalism's hierarchical enterprise organisation".

Richard D. Wolff, Professor Emeritus of Economics, University of Massachusetts, USA

Introduction
1. Worker and social cooperatives within the wider
cooperative movement: importance, evolution and the making of universal
standards INDIA
2. Uralungal Labour Contract Cooperative Society: a century
of excellence KENYA
3. Kigro Recyclers Worker Cooperative: bringing workers
out of the informal economy MOROCCO
4. At-Tawafouk cooperative: the unusual
story of a Moroccan worker cooperative for waste collection and processing
GREECE
5. From workers' struggle to workers' control through a cooperative:
the VIOME case in Greece a cooperative born in the years of the Greek
socio-economic crisis FRANCE
6. Introduction to the French worker
cooperatives (SCOP)
7. Ethiquable: the path to cooperative fairtrade
8. Parcs
& Sports: an emblematic worker buyout 40 years ago, today an innovative
business
9. Quonex Alsatel: an ICT business taken over by its staff
10.
Ardelaine: a local development cooperative SPAIN
11. Worker cooperatives in
Spain: a review of their impressive growth over the last decades
12. Agresta
Cooperative Society: a relentless search for forestry solutions to achieve a
more liveable society, applying the cooperative principles
13. Gredos San
Diego Cooperative Society: education is "the basis for achieving, among all
of us, a more supportive, innovative society, capable, fair and free"
14. The
Mondragon Group: one of the most important examples of entrepreneurial
cooperation between cooperatives ITALY
15. Italian social cooperatives: a
reality emerging from worker cooperatives
16. Cauto Social Cooperative: "do,
learn, share"
17. GOEL Social Cooperative Consortium: successfully struggling
against the Calabrian mafia
18. A unique support system for worker buyouts:
the Marcora Law and CFI UNITED KINGDOM
19. The national worker cooperative
background in the United Kingdom
20. Calverts North Star Press Ltd: how a
printing shop was reborn SWEDEN
21. Vägen Ut! (the way out): a "social worker
cooperative" for work integration JAPAN
22. The worker cooperative movement
in Japan: history and background
23. Central Worker Cooperative: combining
services of general interest and work integration of disadvantaged persons
24. Creators 440Hz: the democratic way of living from democratic education
to democratic work SOUTH KOREA
25. Worker cooperatives in South Korea
26.
Happy Bridge cooperative: becoming a worker cooperative through
institutionalising and learning CANADA
27. Worker cooperative history and
context in Canada
28. Pivot: an architectural cooperative engaged in the
community USA
29. Worker cooperatives in the United States of America
30.
Cooperative Home Care Associates: worker cooperative development and
unionisation hand in hand
31. The Arizmendi Association of Cooperatives: a
group of bakery worker cooperatives inspired by Mondragon BRAZIL
32.
Uniforja: a story that has been built up for 24 years by workers in a
self-management system URUGUAY
33. La Diaria cooperative: Uruguays second
daily newspaper NEW GENERATION COOPERATIVES
34. Networks of IT worker
cooperatives in Argentina and globally: FACTTIC and PATIO Conclusions
Bruno Roelants is a consultant on cooperatives and international development. He is the former Director General of the International Cooperative Alliance (April 2018February 2023). Previously, he was Secretary General of CICOPA as of 2002 and of its regional organisation CECOP CICOPA-Europe as of 2006.