Worker Cooperatives and Revolution: History and Possibilities in the United States more
Worker cooperatives have a long and tortured history, but recently they have been advancing globally on a more stable foundation than before. In this essay I provide a theoretical context for the current growth of cooperatives, drawing on Marxist theory to illuminate their potential. I also consider the sociology and economics of worker cooperatives, in addition to expounding and evaluating their history in the United States. A case-study of a cooperative printing press in Jamaica Plain gives a more intimate portrayal of worker co-ops, and hopefully provides lessons for future cooperators. I interpret society as on the cusp (from a long-term perspective) of a decisive advance of cooperativism; the main purpose of this essay is to explain how and why this advance will occur.
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Social Theory, Social Movements, Sociology, Social and Political Philosophy, Ethics, Sexuality, Gender, Marxism, Feminist Theory and Philosophy, Foucault, Freud, Latin American feminisms and antiglobalization social movements, solidarity economies, theories of socialism, History Of Capitalism, Capitalism, Worker Cooperatives, Cooperatives, and Marxism