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Journal ArticleDOI

Organizations for the 21st Century? Co-Operatives and "New" Forms of Organization

Leslie H. Brown
- 22 Dec 1997 - 
- Vol. 22, Iss: 1, pp 65-93
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TLDR
Co-operative organizational forms are shown to provide models of the "new" forms of organization appropriate for the contemporary economy and for community economic development, despite important differences in the premises and logic used in promoting particular organizational characteristics as discussed by the authors.
Abstract
. This paper discusses calls for "new" forms of organization coming from the literature on sustainable community development and the contemporary organizational literature. There is significant overlap in the forms of organization being advocated, despite important differences in the premises and logic used in promoting particular organizational characteristics. Co-operative organizational forms are shown to provide models of the "new" forms of organization appropriate for the contemporary economy and for community economic development. Co-operatives also offer a mechanism for introducing democratic values and processes into the international economy, an alternative to globalization a la multinational corporation. Resume. Dans cette communication, nous examinerons les appels a de > systemes d'organisation dont il est question dans les publications professionnelles sur le developpement communautaire durable et dans les journaux contemporains traitant des systemes d'organisation. Les divers systemes d'organisation preconises ont beaucoup de points communs, bien qu'ils presentent toutefois de grandes differences au niveau des premisses et de la logique employees pour promouvoir des caracteristiques organisationnelles particulieres. Les cooperatives y sont presentees comme un exemple de > systeme d'organisation, a la fois parce qu'elles sont appropriees pour l'economie contemporaine et parce qu'elles favorisent le developpement economique communautaire. Les cooperatives offrent egalement la possibilite d'introduire des valeurs et des procedes democratiques dans l'economie internationale, une alternative a la globalisation partiquee par les corporations multinationales. I. Introduction There are urgent calls for "new" forms of organization coming from the literature on sustainable community development, and from the contemporary organizational literature. In this paper I review these bodies of literature to identify the characteristics deemed new, and the rationale for such characteristics. I demonstrate that there is significant overlap in the form of organization being called for, although the reasons for advocating particular organizational characteristics differ significantly. I then discuss the co-operative form of organization in light of the organizational characteristics identified above, and argue that co-operatives offer the potential to address the needs identified in the community development literature. I also suggest that they may well meet some of the needs identified by the organizational management literature as relevant to success in today's economic context. Co-ops (e.g. consumer co-ops, worker (labour) co-ops, housing co-ops, producer co-ops, marketing co-ops) are community-based businesses set up to serve the needs of their member/owners. (2) Although co-ops are not, strictly speaking, non-profits, they are part of the "social economy" (Quarter, 1992) which encompasses organizations intended to meet community needs in a democratic fashion. (3) As The Economist has noted, co-ops make possible public ownership of the means of production without state ownership, and free enterprise without capitalism (Craig, 1993: 76). Co-ops are typically incorporated under distinctive co-op legislation, recognizing co-ops as different from conventional businesses. While locally rooted, co-ops are often part of regional, national and international federations, and have the opportunity to participate in international trade and production linkages which may offer the potential for an alternative to globalism a la multinational corporation (Normark, 1995). To further this line of argument I shall consider selected examples of co-ops and co-op activists in the consumer co-op sector. Key actors in these co-ops are seeking to position their co-operatives as organizations which combine characteristics needed by successful enterprises with those required of successful democratic community-based associations. …

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Cooperatives and Community Development: A Perspective on the Use of Cooperatives in Development

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors suggest that cooperatives can be an effective participatory strategy to bootstrap low-income people into the socio-economic mainstream, and they hope to stimulate discussion among community development scholars and practitioners, policymakers, and the public on the potential of cooperative business as a community development strategy, particularly in resource limited communities.

Sustainable Development and Sustainable Transportation: Strategies for Economic Prosperity, Environmental Quality, and Equity

TL;DR: A review of current thinking about sustainable transportation as part of a broader strategy of transportation and land use planning for sustainability can be found in this paper, where the authors identify a number of topics worthy additional research, as well as a detailed bibliography on sustainable development topics.

The social economy: Diverse approaches and practices in Europe and Canada

TL;DR: While the social economy originated in Europe (Desroche, 1983; Gueslin, 1997; Vienney, 1994), by the nineteenth century it emerged in North America as well, particularly in Canada and Quebec with its ties to the United Kingdom and France as well as other European countries, especially Germany and Belgium.
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L’économie sociale : diversité des définitions et des constructions théoriques

TL;DR: In this article, a grands traits un apercu de l’economie sociale au Canada, en s’en tenant a ce que plusieurs appellent la nouvelle economie social, qui s-est manifestee a partir des annees 1970, mais surtout durant les annee 1980.
Dissertation

Les associations de développement local étudiées à travers leurs configurations sociales : le cas d’un village de Haute-Égypte

Milad Yacoub
TL;DR: The concept of configurations sociales was introduced by Norbert Elias et al. as mentioned in this paper in the context of developpement in rural areas egyptiennes, and two types of configurations, i.e., configurations internal and configurations externes, permet d'etudier les interrelations and les tensions avec les differents partenaires des deux associations qu'ils soient prives ou publics.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Second Industrial Divide

TL;DR: The Second Industrial Divide as discussed by the authors is a history of the economic crisis of the 1980s and its consequences on American social and economic history, with a focus on the second industrial divide, the moments at which choices are made that fix the future course of industrial develop-
Book

For The Common Good: Redirecting The Economy Towards Community, The Environment And A Sustainable Future

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that the scale of human activity in the biosphere has grown too large and that change is needed in the approach to economic activity: "correction and expansion a more empirical and historical attitude less pretense on being science and willingness to subordinate the market to purposes that it is not geared to determine."
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Stewart Clegg
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