Osallisuustalous - Suomi
@osallisuustalous.fi
Osallisuustalouden ja talouden demokraattisen suunnittelun ja ekologisen siirtymän kysymyksistä suomeksi. Katso myös Participatory Economy Project: https://participatoryeconomy.org
There is useful material on postcapitalism and democratic planning at indep.network; and participatory economy was formalized as an economics model by professor Robin Hahnel, see here for example: www.routledge.com/Democratic-E...
INDEP
We are an international network of people who share the common goal of advancing a post-capitalist economic system based on democratic economic planning.
indep.network
October 25, 2025 at 8:22 PM
There is useful material on postcapitalism and democratic planning at indep.network; and participatory economy was formalized as an economics model by professor Robin Hahnel, see here for example: www.routledge.com/Democratic-E...
Zeugin oma esitys käsitteli demokraattisen suunnittelun toimintaa, sillä hänen mukaansa absoluuttinen kestävyysarviointi nostaa väistämättömiä poliittisen talouden kysymyksiä suunnitteluun liittyen. Zeugin mielenkiintoiseen esitykseen voi tutustua täältä: www.researchgate.net/publication/...
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October 14, 2025 at 8:07 PM
Zeugin oma esitys käsitteli demokraattisen suunnittelun toimintaa, sillä hänen mukaansa absoluuttinen kestävyysarviointi nostaa väistämättömiä poliittisen talouden kysymyksiä suunnitteluun liittyen. Zeugin mielenkiintoiseen esitykseen voi tutustua täältä: www.researchgate.net/publication/...
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Reposted by Osallisuustalous - Suomi
I definitely don't claim the exact model of participatory economy has all the answers. But in a world starved of hopeful economic visions, it gives us a nuanced conversation of hard economic questions we desperately need to have. And organizations such as INDEP are doing great work with this.
INDEP
INDEP is an international network to advance a post-capitalist economic system based on democratic economic planning.
www.indep.network
March 28, 2025 at 9:06 AM
I definitely don't claim the exact model of participatory economy has all the answers. But in a world starved of hopeful economic visions, it gives us a nuanced conversation of hard economic questions we desperately need to have. And organizations such as INDEP are doing great work with this.
Reposted by Osallisuustalous - Suomi
Our industrial strategy work argues that the limits of market coordination cannot deliver a just transition or build a secure and prosperous economy.
Instead, we need to build out new tools of democratic planning and public coordination.
www.common-wealth.org/perspectives...
Instead, we need to build out new tools of democratic planning and public coordination.
www.common-wealth.org/perspectives...
Transitioning Systems? | Perspectives
On coordinating the green transition.
www.common-wealth.org
November 14, 2024 at 4:15 PM
Our industrial strategy work argues that the limits of market coordination cannot deliver a just transition or build a secure and prosperous economy.
Instead, we need to build out new tools of democratic planning and public coordination.
www.common-wealth.org/perspectives...
Instead, we need to build out new tools of democratic planning and public coordination.
www.common-wealth.org/perspectives...
The PEP talk podcast has discussion on worker management on different levels of the economy (using examples from parecon) in various of their episodes. You can check it out here:
Participatory Economy Project
A Participatory Economy is a model for a new democratic, fair and green economic system developed as a viable alternative to capitalism. It provides a concrete description of how a modern economy of m...
www.youtube.com
January 23, 2025 at 4:57 PM
The PEP talk podcast has discussion on worker management on different levels of the economy (using examples from parecon) in various of their episodes. You can check it out here:
Original article by professor Robin Hahnel: "The Growth Imperative: Beyond Assuming Conclusions"
content.csbs.utah.edu
November 19, 2024 at 2:02 PM
Original article by professor Robin Hahnel: "The Growth Imperative: Beyond Assuming Conclusions"