In this chapter, we reflect on the role academics can play as members of hybrid research collectives concerned to experiment with non-linear and uncertain futures. Using the lens offered by Gibson-Graham’s research on post-capitalist economic development, we situate the mainstream responses to industry decline advocated by established economic interests within a diverse economy framing. We trace how, at a citizen level, other possibilities that might contribute to different postindustrial pathways are also being actively pursued. We consider how such pathways might enact community economies centered on ethical interconnection, resilience, and the growth of wellbeing for people and the planet. The first section of the chapter introduces the ...
In this chapter, we address these questions and others that circle around the concept of sustainable...
Community (or social) enterprises are a form of endeavour within the social economy that can be fram...
In recent years, development practitioners, anthropologists, geographers and others who are observer...
The Community Economies project is an ongoing effort to contribute to an emerging economic politics,...
This research explores community economies as a way of practicing development differently. The commu...
This research explores community economies as a way of practicing development differently. The commu...
Far from naming a singular postcapitalist politics, J. K. Gibson-Graham's notion of "the community e...
Community economy, since the mid‐1990s, has signalled an expanding and evolving project within radic...
Conventional approaches to development in areas that are experiencing economic decline invariably fo...
Conventional approaches to development in areas that are experiencing economic decline invariably fo...
ommunities increasingly see their economic development goal as one of attracting job-generating indu...
Bioregional and “ecological economics” theory describes the growth of local economic linkages as vit...
THIS COMMENTARY WAS invited by the special editors of this issue and is partly based on the Communit...
Theoretically driven by the work of J.-K. Gibson-Graham and postcapitalist politics, the thesis draw...
This paper provides a broad qualitative critique of neo-liberal theory and practice that views Commu...
In this chapter, we address these questions and others that circle around the concept of sustainable...
Community (or social) enterprises are a form of endeavour within the social economy that can be fram...
In recent years, development practitioners, anthropologists, geographers and others who are observer...
The Community Economies project is an ongoing effort to contribute to an emerging economic politics,...
This research explores community economies as a way of practicing development differently. The commu...
This research explores community economies as a way of practicing development differently. The commu...
Far from naming a singular postcapitalist politics, J. K. Gibson-Graham's notion of "the community e...
Community economy, since the mid‐1990s, has signalled an expanding and evolving project within radic...
Conventional approaches to development in areas that are experiencing economic decline invariably fo...
Conventional approaches to development in areas that are experiencing economic decline invariably fo...
ommunities increasingly see their economic development goal as one of attracting job-generating indu...
Bioregional and “ecological economics” theory describes the growth of local economic linkages as vit...
THIS COMMENTARY WAS invited by the special editors of this issue and is partly based on the Communit...
Theoretically driven by the work of J.-K. Gibson-Graham and postcapitalist politics, the thesis draw...
This paper provides a broad qualitative critique of neo-liberal theory and practice that views Commu...
In this chapter, we address these questions and others that circle around the concept of sustainable...
Community (or social) enterprises are a form of endeavour within the social economy that can be fram...
In recent years, development practitioners, anthropologists, geographers and others who are observer...