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2013

A successful co-operative requires a good dose of entrepreneurial spirit, theguardian.com, 18 October

2012

Hard at Work in the Jobless Future, By James H. Lee WFS Home › The Futurist › March-April 2012, Vol. 46, No. 2 ›

“Green-Callers” Answer Call!, Katherine Bray on 27 Jan 2012

Inside Apple's Hidden Factories. Finally. motherjones.com Jan. 27, 2012

4 Reasons Why The Future Of Capitalism Is Homegrown, Small Scale, And Independent, fastcodesign.com, (date not found, January 2012?)

Global Employment Trends 2012: World faces a 600 million jobs challenge, warns ILO, 24 January

2011

A Post-Growth Economy FAQ Michel Bauwens 18th November 2011

What does a post-growth economy look like? By Jeremy Williams: Will ending growth create massive unemployment?

Under our current system, there are disastrous job losses whenever the economy goes into recession. It’s an inherently unstable system that is guaranteed to deliver a jobs cull every ten to twelve years, until it eventually runs out of steam altogether. The transition may be rocky, but a steady state should be much more stable in the longer term.

In the new economy, growth in materials will be limited, but there will still be plenty of change within the system. New businesses will start and jobs will be created. Some sectors will shrink – aviation, oil extraction and so on, but other sectors will boom. Renewable energy is going to be a growing industry for some time to come. Without cheap oil, some aspects of globalization may go into reverse, bringing manufacturing jobs nearer to the point of sale. Food sources will relocalize, re-invigorating local agriculture.

On my walk to the station I pass a tailor, a lawnmower workshop and a TV repair man, all of which are unusual, but these kinds of businesses will be returning to a street near you. As we move away from a throwaway culture, repairing, renovating and recycling will be more important. As resources become more expensive, the price of material goods will rise. Those with disposable income may choose to spend it on services rather than products – a spa visit rather than a shopping spree. This is often referred to as the ‘Cinderella economy’, and it has a healthy future.


World of Work Report 2011- ILO says world heading for a new and deeper jobs recession, warns of more social unrest, Press release, 31 October 2011 ILO warns of a generation “scarred” by a worsening global youth employment crisis

The International Labour Organization (ILO) has warned of a “scarred” generation of young workers facing a dangerous mix of high unemployment, increased inactivity and precarious work in developed countries, as well as persistently high working poverty in the developing world.Press release | 19 October 2011

Why The Future Of Work Will Make Us More Human, resilience-economics.com, October 17, 2011

Quote from introduction from Women’s Major Group Summary, Input to ... (Rio+20) (link not found) / Rio 2012 on WiserEarth

"Throughout the world women are key actors in maintaining the sustaining livelihoods and welfare of their families and communities, and in making a transition to a more equitable and sustainable world. Our economy is linked to and depends on a healthy planet. It also depends on women’s economic contributions, both formal and informal.

Women’s Vision for Rio+20: an Equitable and Sustainable World

Social equity, gender equality and environmental justice must form the heart of sustainable development and of the outcomes of the Rio+20 UN conference in 2012. Twenty years after the first Rio conference, great social and economic inequities still remain. These inequities especially affect women and children, who make up the majority of those living in poverty.

Measures to ensure equity, equality, social and environmental justice need to be prioritized, as these are the cornerstones for achieving sustainable development globally."

Growth, mad men and economists: Why we need an intergenerational and interconnected economy, 30 Sep 2011 – Kyra Choucroun

"Worshipping unfalteringly at the altar of paid work exhibits a tunnel view of how value is created in society", We have lost the plot by 'worshipping paid work', Gareth Morgan and Susan Guthrie, interest.co.nz, August 24

care work which people do which is informal, binding and unpaid, by Cathy Aitchison on March 22, 2011: (link not found)

"...central to any new economic system must be the due place and recognition of care work which people do which is informal, binding and unpaid. This is not volunteering, which implies a certain amount of free will, choosing your time and project and number of hours to put to it. Informal, binding, unpaid care is the sort which goes on in every household and family everywhere, which oils the wheels and is often done largely unnoticed (unless something like illness suddenly prevents it from being done.) The 'binding' bit is the key to differentiating it from voluntary work - most informal carers would never walk away from their babies, children, elderly relatives or other dependants, so they just carry on regardless until the situation changes.The majority (although of course not all) doing informal, binding, unpaid care work are women, especially thinking globally. Any new, sustainable, more humane economic system must take them and their IBU care work into account."

2007

"Environmentalism can't succeed until it confronts the destructive nature of modern work - and supplants it." [1]



References

  1. The Ecology of Work by Curtis White, Published in the May/June 2007 issue of Orion magazine
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