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How Has Structural Racism Held Back the Co-op Movement?

November 4, 2024
10 - 11 a.m., Mountain Time
Free webinar

How Has Structural Racism Held Back the Co-op Movement - event poster

Despite extensive study of co-operatives' real and imagined benefits, we know little about the conditions under which they achieve the lasting scale needed to be a viable alternative and transform the economy. Under what conditions can co-operatives achieve such scale?

A new book by Jason Spicer suggests one essential answer: The cause of co-operatives' comparative weakness in the United States is identified as reflecting the joint effect of economic liberalism and structural racism. Only in the United States did the co-operative face, in its initial development, two well-entrenched incumbents operating with competing ownership models: the investor-owned firm and the race-based chattel slavery system of ownership of people.

In this discussion, Spicer will share his findings, followed by a response from Jessica Gordon Nembhard and a Q&A with attendees.

Jason Spicer is an Assistant Professor in the Marxe School of Public and International Affairs at ¶¶ÒõÂÃÐÐÉäNY Baruch College, where he focuses on social and community entrepreneurship. Prior to joining ¶¶ÒõÂÃÐÐÉäNY, he spent five years on the faculty of the University of Toronto (St. George), where he oversaw the economic development concentration in the graduate urban planning program. He holds a PhD in Political Economy from MIT. He is the author of Co-operative Enterprise in Comparative Perspective: Exceptionally Un-American? (Oxford University Press, 2024).

Jessica Gordon Nembhard is Professor of Community Justice and Social Economic Development in the Department of Africana Studies at John Jay College, of the City University of New York (¶¶ÒõÂÃÐÐÉäNY) in New York City, USA, where she is also Director of the McNair Post-Baccalaureate Achievement Program. She is an affiliate scholar at the Centre for the Study of Co-operatives at the University of Saskatchewan in Canada. She is the author of Collective Courage: A History of African American Cooperative Economic Thought and Practice (Pennsylvania State University Press, 2014).

Organized by MEDLab community fellow Danny Spitzberg, and presented by MEDLab and the Exit to Community Collective.