W.A.G.E. - Working Artists and the Greater Economy
W.A.G.E. - Working Artists and the Greater Economy
Minimum payment standards for artists' labor
W.A.G.E. - Working Artists and the Greater Economy
Since its founding in 2008, W.A.G.E.’s work has developed in service of a single achievable goal—regulating the payment of artist fees in the nonprofit sector—but they emerge from a long tradition of artists organizing around the issue of remuneration for cultural work in the United States that dates back to the 1930s. W.A.G.E.’s mission is to establish sustainable economic relationships between artists and the institutions that contract artists' labor, and to introduce mechanisms for self-regulation into the art field that collectively bring about a more equitable distribution of its economy.
We are so inspired by W.A.G.E.’s work to fight unpaid labor in the arts, and build new models of collective bargaining and power for the field.
WAGENCY - WAGENCY is an artists' solidarity union and a platform for negotiating the fair remuneration of artistic labor in the nonprofit sector. Supplying artists with digital tools and the collective agency to negotiate W.A.G.E. fees or withhold labor when not paid them, WAGENCY is a new model for organizing contingent workers. W.A.G.E. understands that artists ARE workers and deserve fair pay for their labor – WAGENCY empowers them to negotiate it.
We are so inspired by W.A.G.E.’s work to fight unpaid labor in the arts, and build new models of collective bargaining and power for the field.
A Guaranteed Income for the 20th Century
A Guaranteed Income for the 20th Century
A report from The New School Institute on Race, Power and Political Economy
Naomi Zewde, Kyle Strickland, Kelly Capatosto, Ari Glogower, Darrick Hamilton
The Institute on Race, Power and Political Economy conducts research to shed light on the structures of inequality and develop knowledge about the pivotal roles of race, power, and social stratification. Building relationships beyond the academy, institute researchers work to identify, implement, and scale transformative ideas to promote economic inclusion, civic empowerment, and social equity. The institute also works to foster the next generation of scholars bringing diverse backgrounds, perspectives, and new thinking to society’s biggest challenges.
Over the past several years, the idea of establishing a minimum income floor via a Guaranteed Income has gained traction, with several pilots offering opportunities to see the benefits of these policies in action.
We support establishing a minimum income floor for all, and believe widespread adoption of the policy would make meaningful progress towards our broader vision of protections for all. However, we are not convinced by the idea of a Universal Basic Income (UBI) that would deliver the same amount of support to everyone, regardless of their income level. Instead, we believe any guaranteed income program should seek to bring all individuals up to a minimum standard, providing more support to those in greater need, and narrowing wage and opportunity gaps across the economy.
For these reasons, we find the New School’s guaranteed income proposal particularly compelling. The authors suggest updating the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) in a way that makes it function more like a true guaranteed income, removing the various income requirements and benefit differences that define the EITC today. This seems like good sense to us!
Survival Economies: Black Informality in Chicago
Survival Economies
Black informality in Chicago
Nik Theodore, University of Illinois at Chicago. Forward by Richard Wallace, Equity and Transformation
Nik Theodore is a Professor in the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC)’s Department of Urban Planning and Policy. His work focuses on economic restructuring, labor standards, and worker organizing. Richard Wallace is the founder and director of Equity and Transformation (EAT), an organization which fights for social and economic equity for Black workers in informal work and those who have been formerly incarcerated.
EAT was founded in 2018 by post-incarcerated Black people from Chicago, in an effort to uplift the voices and power of Black informal workers in the US. The mission of EAT is to build social and economic equity for Black workers engaged in the informal economy.
Survival Economies is an important report that explores the ways many Black informal workers in Chicago get by from day to day. Excluded from the benefits and protections of traditional employment, they rely on informal activities, like selling loose cigarettes or offering informal childcare, for income.
Expanding protections for all requires finding solutions that will work for those who are most excluded from the current safety net, like the Black, informal workers who make up the membership of Equity and Transformation (EAT) Chicago, whose work and lives are documented in this report.
EAT was founded in 2018 by post-incarcerated Black people from Chicago, in an effort to uplift the voices and power of Black informal workers in the US. The mission of EAT is to build social and economic equity for Black workers engaged in the informal economy.
Learn more about EAT Chicago’s important work here.
Guilded - A Freelancer-Owned Cooperative
Guilded - A Freelancer-Owned Cooperative
Protecting freelancers against wage theft
Guilded Freelancer Cooperative
Guilded is a cooperative committed to empowering freelance workers. They are incubated and informed by the work of the United States Federation of Worker Cooperatives. Guilded provides contract management, invoicing, guaranteed payments, tax preparation, and health care.
Guilded offers an exciting new model to build collective power through shared ownership, shared governance, and shared protection.
Guilded is a freelancer-owned cooperative that provides 1099 workers with access to timely guaranteed payment, backend invoicing and tax services, and a range of worker benefits like licensing, insurance, and direct primary care. Guilded creates financial stability while providing freelancers with opportunities to build relationships with other gig workers, collective agency and power, and financial assets as cooperative owners.
Incubated by the United States Federation of Worker Cooperatives (USFWC), the national grassroots membership organization for worker cooperatives, Guilded offers an exciting new model to build collective power through shared ownership, shared governance, and shared protection.
Targeted Universalism
Targeted Universalism
Policy & Practice
john a. powell, Stephen Menendian, Wendy Ake
The Othering & Belonging Institute at the University of California, Berkeley advances groundbreaking research, policy, and ideas that examine and remediate the processes of exclusion, marginalization, and structural inequality—what we call othering—in order to build a world based on inclusion, fairness, justice, and care for the earth—what we call belonging.
Targeted Universalism offers an inspiring framework for those who want to reimagine new systems for all, while closing the opportunity gaps that are embedded in today’s systems for many historically marginalized groups.
Targeted Universalism encourages us to dream big about the world we want to build, and set universal goals that apply to all of us, as humans. And then it encourages us to look with clear eyes at the inequities embedded in and reinforced by our current systems, and craft targeted strategies to make sure that all truly means ALL, and that everyone achieves those universal goals.
We’re not only inspired by the framework, but also all the helpful tools that our friends at the Othering and Belonging Institute have published to make the framework actionable.
Check them out below!
If I Only had a Heart: A DisCO Manifesto
If I Only had a Heart: A DisCO Manifesto
Value Sovereignty, Care Work, Commons, and Distributed Cooperative Organizations
DisCO.coop
The DisCO.coop is meant to further the ideas and practices put forth in the DisCO Manifesto with a comprehensive framework designed to support the worldwide development of “Distributed Cooperativism”. DisCO.coop aims to prototype new and radical forms of ownership, governance, entrepreneurship, and value accounting meant to counteract pervasive economic inequality.
The DisCO Manifesto is a deep dive into the world of Distributed Cooperative Organizations.
There are lots of ways to build and reimagine collective power, but one of the ones that has most intrigued us are DAOs–Decentralized Autonomous Organizations. DAOs promise, via smart contracts and blockchain technologies, to enable decentralized ownership and governance at scale - pretty exciting stuff! And while the hype around DAOs is huge, the reality is still to be determined. We have concerns about the ways this ecosystem is shaping up, and in particular the threats of replicating the same inequities on the blockchain that exist in other parts of society and the economy today.
And yet, the promise is real! That’s why we were so excited to stumble upon DisCO.coop and The DisCO Manifesto, which names DAOs’ challenges with clear eyes, yet shares a vision for ways to leverage that technology and combine it with tried and true cooperative practices in ways that enable shared ownership and governance at scale. It’s a heady, visionary, and joyful examination of the opportunities DisCOs offer to reimagine shared ownership and governance, and we couldn’t be more excited to share it.