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Industrial Symbiosis Kalundborg, Denmark
symbiosis

Pathways to Sustainable Self-Governance: Democratic Open-Source Food and Manufacturing Networks

Short Description

Worker Cooperative Networks for Sovereignty of Food, Commerce, & Community: Panel/Breakouts/Discussion to Envision & Chart Implementation Framework of Industrial Permaculture Ecology

Full Workshop Proposal

Pathways to Sustainable Self-Governance: Democratic Open-Source Food and Manufacturing Networks

Workshop Information
Event Date: Fri, 06/25/2010 – 3:30pm – 5:30pm
Event Location: Wayne County Community College: 23A

Full Description:

This workshop outlines a vision for a democratic, worker-owned, advanced industrial ecology society. We seek pathways to provide the burgeoning food education/justice movement with the tools to become economically sustainable, and to link the emerging green industrial worker cooperatives with them into sovereign networks. Once active, such networks can become the basis for sustainable, socially just communities that revitalize locales via open source sustainable agriculture and manufacturing methods. Our panel — with academic, commercial, and school of hard knocks experience — will frame the demonstrated solutions, numerous pieces of the puzzle that we as a society need to put together.

Pathways to Sustainable Self-Governance: Democratic Open-Source Food and Manufacturing Networks

Short Description

Worker Cooperative Networks for Sovereignty of Food, Commerce, & Community: Panel/Breakouts/Discussion to Envision & Chart Implementation Framework of Industrial Permaculture Ecology

Full Workshop Proposal

Pathways to Sustainable Self-Governance: Democratic Open-Source Food and Manufacturing Networks

Collaborating Organizations

Arizmendi Association of Cooperatives (2543) | Mandela Marketplace (2339) | Planting Justice (1407) | Mandela Foods Cooperative (2340) | Abolish Human Rentals (1460) | Permaculture Cooperative (1720)


Photo: Oakland Sol: Oakland Sustaining Ourselves Locally who generously provided accommodation, workspace and knowledge during incubation of this workshop

Collaborating Organizations

Arizmendi Association of Cooperatives (2543)

The Arizmendi Association of Cooperatives is itself a cooperative made up of five member businesses: four cooperative bakeries and a development and support collective. Members share a common mission, share ongoing accounting, legal, educational and other support services, and support the development of new member cooperatives by the Association. http://arizmendi.coop


Mandela Marketplace (2339)

Mandela Market Place is a pioneer in development, application and assessment of community food systems. The organization evolved since 2001, first as a project of the Environmental Justice Institute – Tides Center, until incorporating in 2005 as a stand-alone 501c3 organization with a goal to strengthen community health, integrity and indentity by providing economic opportunity and empowerment for inner-city Oakland residents and businesses, and local family farms. Mandela MarketPlace works directly with community residents, local, state and federal agencies, non-profits, small business owners, and farmers to support strategies to meet food needs, expand economic opportunity and increase self-reliance of low-income and disenfranchised people. http://mandelamarketplace.org


Planting Justice (1407)

Planting Justice is a non-profit organization based in Oakland, CA dedicated to food justice, economic justice, and sustainable local food systems. We are the first organization of our kind to combine ecological training and urban food production with a grassroots door-to-door organizing model that will vastly increase our educational community outreach, help us to recruit volunteers, decentralize our fundraising sources, and provide local jobs that also train young community organizers. http://www.plantingjustice.org


Mandela Foods Cooperative (2340)

Mandela Foods Cooperative is a locally-owned and operated full-service grocery store and nutrition education center located in West Oakland, a community long underserved in grocery retail. The present undersupply of food retail in West Oakland represents an opportunity to leverage untapped local buying power into new business and employment opportunities and healthy eating options for West Oakland residents. The Cooperative will offer local goods, wholesome, fresh and affordable foods grown on family farms, nutrition education classes and a cooperative economic investment program that provides multi-level investment for community residents. http://www.mandelafoods.com


Abolish Human Rentals (1460)

Abolish Human Rentals is dedicated to bringing an old idea into the public conscience, that the standard employment relationship, a contract for the rental of people, is invalid due to the inalienable rights of humans. It is based on the already widely held principle of the non-transferability of responsibility for one’s actions. That principle, taken to its logical conclusion, means the rental of humans have no more legitimacy than their sale. http://www.abolishhumanrentals.org


Collaborating Organizations:
Arizmendi Assn. of Cooperatives (2543) — http://arizmendi.coop — and
Mandela Marketplace (2339) — http://mandelamarketplace.org — and
Planting Justice (1407) — http://www.plantingjustice.org — and
Mandela Foods Cooperative (2340) — http://www.mandelafoods.com — and
Abolish Human Rentals (1460) — http://www.abolishhumanrentals.org

Language(s): English
Tracks:
Climate Justice: sustainability, resources and land
Democracy and Governance

Important pieces that will be presented here include the successful strategies employed in the worker cooperative networks/alliances of Mondragon, Ohio, and the San Francisco Bay Area, Permaculture design strategies implemented even in harsh climate zones, Denmark’s national industrial symbiosis program, non-parasitic capitalization of non-hierarchical enterprises, and regenerative urban food justice paradigms.

Participants will self-organize into groups to construct models that put some of the pieces together. Workshop participants will then seek to bolster viability of the proposed models, emphasizing possible pilot programs in Detroit, Oakland and in Brooklyn.

Panel members include Quinton Sankofa of Mandela Marketplace and James Berk of Mandela Foods Cooperative, Mike Leung of the embryonic Worker Cooperative Credit Union, and Gavin Raiders of Planting Justice. Facilitator: Kirstie Stramler of Permaculture Cooperative.

For updates leading up to USSF 2010, see the panel and workshop group pages on http://organize.ussf2010.org and videos on http://permaculture.tv/tag/ussf2010/ .

Organizer Name: Kirstie Stramler
Organizer Email: kirstie@permaculture.tv
First Sponsoring Organization Name: Permaculture Cooperative

A documentary about the full project life-cycle of a permaculture aid project in Aceh

More on Permaculture Relief Patterns for Haiti: Howtos from Aceh and Timor and Community Disaster Management and Permaculture Relief Aid in Aceh – Petra Schneider of IDEP Foundation, Bali

Organic seeds Aceh

This documentary film shows the development of Permaculture projects in Aceh, starting from the emergency response activities conducted by IDEP Foundation to help survivors of the Asian Tsunami of December 2004. IDEP Foundation works with the local organization Green Camp to create a long-term Permaculture project.

This initiative was undertaken to support sustainable recovery of all the environment and lives that had been impacted. During the 3 years the program ran, many activities were conducted in many areas by GFS staff and volunteers. At the conclusion of this program, the Acehnese staff of GFS decided to continue their work in Aceh as The Aceh Permaculture Foundation (YPA).

The Green Hand Field School

The devastating earthquake and tsunami of December 26, 2004 literally wiped much of Aceh’s west coast off the map. Half a million survivors are still living in crowded barracks and moldy tents, having lost their homes, families, possessions and livelihoods. Roads and bridges were washed away, leaving many communities isolated.

For Aceh’s Internally Displaced People (IDPs), food security remains a priority issue. The home gardens, rice fields and fruit trees that once fed Aceh’s coastal villagers have been destroyed and many people are left without the means to earn money for food. FAO estimates that 70% of the farmland on the west coast has been affected by the tsunami with up to 20% of this permanently damaged or under water.

Affected communities are beginning to strategize how to regain their self-sufficiency. Many need to learn new skills to produce food in the new landscape, restore damaged soils, replant their home gardens and re-establish agricultural systems.

The GHFS Village Development program helps coastal villages achieve food security and rebuild their livelihoods while protecting the environment. We believe that if reconstruction is implemented using sustainable principles, communities will recover quickly, creating permanent prosperity for the survivors and future generations. The aim of this sustainable development program is to assist IDPs in achieving permanent positive change to increase their capacity to help themselves, becoming self-reliant so that these changes flow on to future generation

The Green Hand Field School

Toby Hemenway redefines sustainability as regeneration and promotes horticulture over agriculture

Hemenway is a frequent teacher, consultant and lecturer on permaculture and ecological design throughout the U.S. and other countries. His writing has appeared in magazines such as Natural Home, Whole Earth Review and American Gardener. He is an adjunct professor in the School of Graduate Education at Portland State University, a
Scholar-in-Residence at Pacific University, and a biologist consultant for the Biomimicry Guild.

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Video Source: Duke University

Permaculture, Forever Sustainability
The guru of the permaculture movement came to Duke last week.
By Bill Chameides, Scientific American, Green Grok blog

The guru of the permaculture movement came to Duke last week.

To hear him tell it, Toby Hemenway is an ordinary guy. To see him in person, you get the sense nothing could be further from the truth. The 300+ people that crowded into Love Auditorium underscored that with a standing ovation for his talk on “How Permaculture Can Save Humanity and the Earth but Not Civilization.” The lecture was jam-packed with information ranging from human evolution to gardening — and delivered by a far-from-ordinary guy.

Source: Bill Chameides, Scientific American, Green Grok blog

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