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Transition to common work : building community at the Working Centre

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    Certified Accessible By: National Network for Equitable Library Service
    Temps de fonctionnement: 07:47 hrs
    Voix de: Graham Yeates
    Publisher:
    BC Libraries Cooperative, 2021
    Note: This book was produced with support from the Government of Canada's Social Development Partnerships Program - Disability Component.

Details:

  • Date:
    Created
    2015
    Summary:

    The Working Centre in the downtown core of Kitchener, Ontario, is a widely recognized and successful model for community development. Begun from scratch in 1982, it is now a vast network of practical supports for the unemployed, the underemployed, the temporarily employed, and the homeless, populations that collectively constitute up to 30 percent of the labour market both locally and across North America. Transition to Common Work is the essential text about The Working Centre--its beginnings thirty years ago, the lessons learned, and the myriad ways in which its strategies and innovations can be adapted by those who share its goals. The Working Centre focuses on creating access-to-tools projects rather than administrative layers of bureaucracy. This book highlights the core philosophy behind the centre's decentralized but integrated structure, which has contributed to the creation of affordable services. Underlying this approach are common-sense innovations such as thinking about virtues rather than values, developing community tools with a social enterprise approach, and implementing a radically equal salary policy. For social workers, activists, bureaucrats, and engaged citizens in third-sector organizations (NGOs, charities, not-for-profits, co-operatives), this practical and inspiring book provides a method for moving beyond the doldrums of "poverty relief" into the exciting world of community building.

    Contents:
    • Part one: the Working Centre takes root
    • Introduction: beyond us and them
    • Building community: the Working Centre's roots
    • Liberation from overdevelopment
    • Part two: community engagement
    • The Virtues
    • St. John's Kitchen: redistribution through cooperation
    • Searching for work at the Help Centre
    • The nuts and bolts of an alternative organization
    • Part three: toward a philosophy of work
    • Ethical imagination: the Working Centre's approach to salaries
    • Community tools
    • Small is beautiful: re-embedding reciprocal relationships in daily work
    • Conclusion: transition to common work
    • Map of the Working Centre buildings and projects
    • Map of the Working Centre locations in downtown Kitchener
    • A thirty-year chronology of the Working Centre
    • People of the Working Centre.
    Original Publisher: Waterloo, Ontario, Ottawa, Ontario, Wilfrid Laurier University Press, Canadian Electronic Library
    Language(s): English
    ISBN: 9781771121613, 1771121610