دانلود مقاله ISI انگلیسی شماره 86776
ترجمه فارسی عنوان مقاله

شهر نیویورک: مبارزه با روایت اقتصاد همبستگی

عنوان انگلیسی
New York City: Struggles over the narrative of the Solidarity Economy
کد مقاله سال انتشار تعداد صفحات مقاله انگلیسی
86776 2018 9 صفحه PDF
منبع

Publisher : Elsevier - Science Direct (الزویر - ساینس دایرکت)

Journal : Geoforum, Available online 9 April 2018

ترجمه کلمات کلیدی
تعاونی کارگری، اقتصاد همبستگی، فضایی فمینیستی، شهر نیویورک، فقر ارتباطی، ضد سرمایه داری،
کلمات کلیدی انگلیسی
Worker cooperatives; Solidarity economy; Feminist spatiality; New York City; Relational poverty; Anti-capitalism;
پیش نمایش مقاله
پیش نمایش مقاله  شهر نیویورک: مبارزه با روایت اقتصاد همبستگی

چکیده انگلیسی

The solidarity economy in North America has received growing attention at multiple scales in the past ten years. As worker cooperatives in New York City enjoy newfound municipal support, narrative struggles emerge between actors within the solidarity economy space. The solidarity economy may be theorized as capitalism’s feminized ‘other’: malleable, unfixed, local, and difficult to quantify. This feminization extends to both its workforce, a majority of whom are women, and the labor it produces, primarily domestic work. It is for these reasons that solidarity economy work is often overlooked as a political economy capable of structural transformation, and the discomfort with its breadth has lead movement leaders to uphold and advocate for more ‘formal’ models like cooperatives and deploy ‘poverty alleviation’ and entrepreneurship narratives to stabilize the fluid field. I argue that this project blanches the radical edges of a movement, minimizing not only those whose labor accounts for the majority of solidarity economy work, but ignoring the transformative potential of sites where such work happens. Based on a series of qualitative interviews with solidarity economy practitioners, this paper argues that the dominant narrative of solidarity economy work in New York City ignores where most of this work occurs and by whom, erasing and undermining those efforts. Counter-narratives emerge in those ‘forgotten’ spaces and thus transform them into sites of radical, anti-capitalist organizing. In so doing, this paper poses a question for geographers about how movements may continue to challenge our assumptions about space.