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Mobilizing Community Capital for Co-op Development in Manitoba

Author: 
Brendan Reimer and Kirsten Bernas
Date: 
2013-11-05

Seeking to address the investment financing challenge that co-operatives face, this research explores the potential for building on existing legislation in Manitoba to create a province-wide CDIF as a financial vehicle to raise equity capital for co-ops by leveraging the provincial Community Enterprise Development (CED) Tax Credit to encourage equity investments in co-operative start-ups and expansions.

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Social Impact Measurement

This webinar will be delivered on Tuesday, November 19, in English, from 12:00 p.m. to 1 p.m. (EST) hosted by the MaRS Centre for Impact Investing, through its Social Finance Connects platform, and Employment and Social Development Canada (ESDC).

This webinar will bring together non-profit and government representatives to share their experiences and expertise on social impact measurement. Presenters will provide information on the current context that is driving the need for impact measurement, best practices and challenges. François Weldon, Director General of Policy Research Directorate, EDSC, and Jean-Pierre Voyer, President and Chief Executive Officer of Social Research and Demonstration Corporation, will share their experience and expertise on developing impact measurement.

This webinar is one in a series on social finance related issues. With these webinars, ESDC is moving forward on next steps committed to in the Harnessing the Power of Social Finance report. (/en/page/broken-link?old_url=http%253A%252F%252Fwww.hrsdc.gc.ca).

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Idle No More 1-year Webinar: Restoring Stable Indigenous Economies


Idle No More kicks off the #INM1yr webinar series on November 10th with Anishnaabe activist Winona LaDuke on Restoring Stable Indigenous Economies. Join us at 10am CST on Nov 10th, (11am EST, 10am CST, 8am PST)

BIO

Winona LaDuke (Anishinaabe) is an internationally acclaimed author, orator and activist. A graduate of Harvard and Antioch Universities with advanced degrees in rural economic development, LaDuke has devoted her life to protecting the lands and life ways of Native communities. In 1994, Time magazine named her one of America’s fifty most promising leaders under forty years of age, and in 1997 she was named Ms. Magazine Woman of the Year.

Other honors include the Reebok Human Rights Award, the Thomas Merton Award, the Ann Bancroft Award, the Global Green Award, and the prestigious International Slow Food Award for working to protect wild rice and local biodiversity. LaDuke also served as Ralph Nader’s vice-presidential running mate on the Green Party ticket in the 1996 and 2000 presidential elections. In addition to numerous articles, LaDuke is the author of Last Standing Woman (fiction), All Our Relations (non-fiction), In the Sugarbush (children's non-fiction), and The Winona LaDuke Reader. Her most recent book is Recovering the Sacred: the Power of Naming and Claiming (South End Press). An enrolled member of the Mississippi band of Anishinaabe, LaDuke lives with her family on the White Earth Reservation in northern Minnesota.

She is also the Founding Director of the White Earth Land Recovery Project, a reservation based non-profit devoted to restoring the land-base and culture of the White Earth Anishinaabeg. She helped found Honor the Earth in 1993 and has served in a leadership position since the organization’s inception.

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Using Community Capitals to Build Assets for Positive Community Change

 

Speaker
Mary Emery, Head of the Sociology & Rural Studies Department
South Dakota State University

 

via Conference Call
December 12th, 2013 @ 11:55am Eastern Time

To understand how communities work and scale up change, Mary Emery and her partners developed the Community Capitals Framework. In their research they determined that healthy, sustainable communities invested in 7 types of capital: natural, cultural, human, social, political, financial and built. The Community Capitals approach focus on the intersection of these capitals and how they build upon one another to create sustainable change.

Join in this tele-learning to hear from Mary Emery about the Community Capitals approach and how it could be helpful to you in your community work. There will be lots of time for question and answer during the call and a podcast will be made available after the discussion.

Mary Emery focuses on rural and community development including using the Community Capitals Framework (CCF) in evaluation, research on community change, and program planning. She coordinates the Great Plains IDEA - a trans-disciplinary multi-university distance degree in Community Development and is Department Head for Sociology and Rural Studies South Dakota State University.

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