Mutualism : building the next economy from the ground up /

"The progressive twentieth century changed every facet of life for American workers--from how much life you could expect to have, to what you had the right to demand of it. But by 2027, a majority of American workers will go to work every day as a part of the gig economy, and without the tradit...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Horowitz, Sara
Group Author: Kifer, Andy, 1985-
Published: Random House,
Publisher Address: New York, NY :
Publication Dates: [2021]
Literature type: Book
Language: English
Edition: First edition.
Subjects:
Summary: "The progressive twentieth century changed every facet of life for American workers--from how much life you could expect to have, to what you had the right to demand of it. But by 2027, a majority of American workers will go to work every day as a part of the gig economy, and without the traditional employer-sponsored safety net that baby boomers took for granted. And within a decade, a majority of Americans won't even be traditional employees. A new generation of workers--from low-wage service workers to white-collar freelancers--faces a landscape in which basic benefits like paid sick leave, pensions or 401Ks, disability benefits, or employer-sponsored healthcare are things of the past. Given these facts, America is either headed for an unprecedented social crisis, or a golden age of cooperative innovation. In the absence of government action, MacArthur Genius and longtime organizer Sara Horowitz has redefined the stakes of today's labor crisis, showing that the remedy to this shift in the way we work lies in a cooperative model rooted in the American experience. From the movement for women's suffrage to the civil rights movement to your local food co-op, these cooperative endeavors--which Horowitz calls "mutualist" movements--didn't exist to make a profit, but were rather economic engines for the social good, and were founded on a simple premise: People can join together to solve their own problems, even the most intractable ones. They don't necessarily need government, or private business, to do it for them. In Mutualism, Horowitz shows how this approach will be the framework on which the future safety net for American workers will rest. Horowitz demonstrates how mutualist structures are already helping us solve common problems--and where else they could be--by revisiting the little known origins of many household names, like Land O' Lakes, Ace Hardware, and REI to show how cooperatives are quietly driving rural and urban economies alike all over the world. Ca
Carrier Form: x, 260 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
Bibliography: Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN: 9780593133521
0593133528
Index Number: HD3444
CLC: F279.712.42
Call Number: F279.712.42/H816
Contents: Part I: What is mutualism? -- "Horowitz says we shall make no more brassieres": or, a family history of the safety net -- Early mutualism: the ism before capitalism -- Mutualist organization: the three rules of mutualism -- Mutualist ecosystems: building biodiverse scale -- Mutualist transformation: Randolph and Rustin, building mutualist bridges -- Part II: The mutualist future -- What does labor want?: or, we are all workers -- The future of labor: organizing the unorganized -- The future of government: give mutualists a job -- The future of capital: a market for mutualism -- The future of you: how to build.