The Other Economies Are Possible Track will bring together a diverse
array of people and
groups who are working to create and sustain democratic, grassroots
economic alternatives.
Through a series of panels, presentations, round-table discussions and
participatory
workshops, we will share experiences, make connections, build
strategies, and envision new
possibilities for creating vibrant examples of economic cooperation and
solidarity.
The goals of
the track are:
1) To make more visible, accessible and irresistible the diversity of
grassroots, democratic and life-centered (instead of profit-centered)
economic practices and initiatives that already exist in our midst.
2) To provide clear, introductory events and workshops for people and
groups who are new to
discussions and practices of various alternative economic initiatives.
3) To strengthen movements for global and local justice, ecology and
democracy with positive examples, proposals and visions for alternative
economies.
4) To foster connections, mutual-learning and strategy-building between
a
diverse array of people and groups who are working to create and
sustain
grassroots economic initiatives.
5) To engage and inspire local/regional policy-makers and citizens to
creating public policy that
supports the implementation of the economic alternatives discussed at
the Forum.
Track Program:
I. Plenary - Gar Alperovitz (National Center for Economic
Alternatives) and Julie Graham
(Community Economies Collective and UMass Amherst)
II. Panels
- “Financing Our Cooperative Economy” (Ethan Mitchell- Green Mountain
Mutual Aid; Catherine
Austin Fitts- Solari, Inc; others TBA)
- “Grassroots Tools for Exchanging” (E.F. Schumacher Society; Earth
and Sky Exchange
Collective; others TBA)
- “Participatory Economics: A Vision for Life After Capitalism”
(Michael Albert and others)
- Grassroots Solutions I: Food Systems (participants TBA)
- Grassroots Solutions II: Healthcare (participants TBA)
- Grassroots Solutions III: Education (participants TBA)
- Grassroots Solutions IV: Transportation (participants TBA)
- Grassroots Solutions V: Energy (participants TBA)
- “Rethinking Economy” (Community Economies Collective-- Julie Graham,
Stephen Healy,
Anasuya Weil)
- “Worker Cooperatives” (Omar Freilla- Green Cooperatives; members of
WORC-N; Stacey
Cordeiro-Cooperative Development Institute)
- “Dirty Money: Corporate/Governmental Organized Crime and How to Stop
It” (Lucy Komisar,
Catherine Austin Fitts, and one other TBA)
- “Towards a Solidarity Economy: Making Links, Building Movments” (Len
Krimerman- GEO
Newsletter; Noemi Gizspenc- Ownership Associates; others TBA)
- “Policy for Community Stability and Democracy” (Thad
Wiliamson-Harvard; James DeFillips-
CUNY; Jessica Gordon Nembhard-University of Maryland)
- “The Importance of an Alternative Economic Press” (Dollars and Sense
and others)
III. Workshops
- “Re-engineering Our Community Economies: Taking Back Our Wealth”
Catherine Austin Fitts,
Solari Inc. (Washington D.C.)
- “The Boundaries of Participation: Creating Real Democracy in
Cooperatives” Ethan Mitchell,
Green Mountain Mutual Aid (VT)
- “The E2M Model” Michael Garjian, Valley Community Development
Corporation/E2M Project
(Amherst, MA)
- “How to Create and Sustain a Worker-Owned Cooperative” WORC-N
(Worker Owned and Run
Cooperative Network of Boston)
- “How to Create a Local Currency” E.F. Schumacher Society
- “Intentional Communites and Ecovillages” Charles Uchu, Gaia Host
Collective (Shutesbury, MA)
- “Islamic Banking” Aamir Rehman, Harvard Business School
- “Creating a Barter Network” Earth & Sky Exchange Collective
(Amherst, MA)
IV. Other Events
- A “Making Connections” Gathering --A creative, facilitated networking
event to help
practitioners and organizers of economic alternatives meet each other,
make new linkages and
generate new possibilities for collaborative effort.
V. Installations and Displays
- Tables for organizations in the Other Economies Track to display
materials
- An interactive GIS station at which people will participate in
mapping New England’s
alternative economy (*materials needed: a PC computer with Windows
2000 or higher, and with
Microsoft Access installed... no internet access is necessary)
- “Celebrating Our Economic Diversity Quilt”- A participatory art area
in which we will generate
a collective quilt that represents our diverse alternative economic
initiatives/projects/
experiences (*materials needed: a table for art supplies, floor space
to create and assemble the
quilt, and a place to display the quilt)
- Ongoing video showings about cooperative economics (*materials
needed: TV and VCR)
- “Other Economies Are Possible” Reader. A printed/copied and bound
collection of articles and
resources submitted by track participants that provides a “toolkit” for
organizing economic
alternatives in New England. Will be distributed widely at the Forum.
VI. Beyond the Forum
- www.othereconomies.org will act as a clearinghouse for documents
presented at the Forum
and for ongoing connections afterwards.