Community economic development officer
Title: Community economic development officer
Terms of Employment: Permanent, Full Time
Title: Community economic development officer
Terms of Employment: Permanent, Full Time
Title: Community social development officer (Community Development Coordinator)
Terms of Employment: Permanent, Full Time, Weekend, Day, Evening
Social Innovation and Community Engagement! How do we do it better with more impact? How might the practices and patterns of Art of Hosting serve in these domains? Bring your questions, curiosity, real world work challenges and issues. Bring your passion, heart, courage and vulnerability. In the spirit of co- discovering, co- learning and co- evolving. Discover how to intentionally shift the shape of your conversations to get to different results.
Fostering Conditions for Social Innovation & Community Engagement. The Art of Hosting is a set of patterns and practices for addressing complexity. Over three days, you will experience and learn simple yet powerful processes that build community, activate collective intelligence, foster individual and collaborative leadership practices, tap into the inspiration and collective brainpower of your teams and stakeholders, sparking and sustaining imagination to drive innovative thinking and foster high value output. This is a very participatory based workshop.
The CUMA cooperative is a service that provides its members the means necessary to their operations. It thus provides an opportunity for its members to use farm equipment at the lowest possible price, meeting the needs of each. A cooperative use of agricultural equipment (CUMA) is a group of farmers established under the Law on Cooperatives. The first mission of a CUMA is to enable its members to use farm equipment at the lowest possible cost and the needs of each member. The CUMA is a great way to reduce the capitalization in machinery and equipment, thus reducing production costs. It also allows the use of more efficient machines and free up capital that can be directed towards productive investment.
The CUMO cooperative is the equivalent of the CUMA, but where we share a resource workforce. The CUMO model offers producers a reliable source of skilled agricultural labor at an affordable cost. For employees, this allows them to be employed full-time, to enjoy better working conditions and enjoy a variety of experiences. The CUMO assigns a full-time employee to fill the partial needs of labor by an average of eight producers.
This webinar will explain some of the features and consolidated benefits of these cooperatives.
Carrolyn O'Grady agr.
Advisor, Agri-Environment and Regional Development
Regional Directorate of Montérégie West
The Quebec Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food
Ms. O'Grady has extensive experience in project management and territory mobilization planning. She is a general agronomist and has worked in several areas including agricultural livestock production and regional development. She also worked with the community on projects of agricultural cooperatives and is working to promote the adoption of Integrated Pest Management (IPM) techniques among farmers. She has worked with the Montérégie West directorate of The Quebec Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food (MAPAQ) since August 2012.
Webinar participation is FREE, but registration is required.
Once registered, you will receive the access instructions for webinar participation.
This webinar will open the dialogue on ethnocultural co-operatives (specifically reflecting on examples across Canada and the US) and the place of these co-ops in the larger society. The two featured speakers are both undertaking research as part of the Measuring the Co-operative Difference Research Network: Jo-Anne Lee of the University of Victoria and Jessica Gordon-Nembhard of John Jay College, affiliated with the City University of New York.
Jessica Gordon-Nembhard will begin the webinar by providing a description of co-ops emerging in African American contexts in the US. Through her discussion of the history and examples, participants will better understand how co-operatives emerged in response to the social context, race relations and people living on the margins.
Jo-Anne Lee will examine how researchers have written about cooperatives and the absences in our understandings of co-operatives in Canadian society using the Japanese Fishing Cooperatives on the West Coast as a case study. Co-operatives play many different roles in nation formation. As social entities, co-operatives are bound to reflect existing power relations in the larger society including those of race, gender, class and colonialism. In addition, Jo-Anne will explore a couple of key questions:
How can we understand the relative absence of knowledge about "ethnic" cooperatives?
How has this lacunae affected our knowledge and understanding of cooperatives?
She will engage participants in a conversation that shifts from normative and descriptive discussions to critical thinking and reconceptualizing the role of cooperatives in larger social, cultural, political and economic contexts.
New Economy Week is a week of celebration designed to shine a light on the movement to build a new economy – an economy that is restorative to people, place, and the planet. From October 12-18, we will be highlighting events, actions, reports, works of art, and other projects that promote the principles of democracy, justice, and sustainability.
From October 12-18, the New Economy Coalition will be highlighting events, actions, reports, works of art, and other projects all across the United States and Canada. By calling attention to the thousands of things people are doing right now to build a new kind of economy, we hope to inspire more participation in this movement and catalyze a national conversation on the need for deep, systemic change.
CCEDNet is a partner of New Economy Week and member of the New Economy Coalition.