Business Co-operatives in Australia: “Unlikely Soil For a Co-operative Movement”
Access status:
Open Access
Type
PreprintAbstract
While co-operatives are traditionally associated with workers, consumers and farmers, the business model, with its emphasis on democracy and community, has also been adopted by small business owners, the self-employed and professionals. These business co-operatives are distinct ...
See moreWhile co-operatives are traditionally associated with workers, consumers and farmers, the business model, with its emphasis on democracy and community, has also been adopted by small business owners, the self-employed and professionals. These business co-operatives are distinct phenomenon because they primarily consist of independent organizational entities, which are not co-operatives and are generally in direct competition with each other. They are unique in that they bring together separate organisations that seek to combat market threats while adopting a philosophy based on co-operative principles.This article begins with an overview of the Australian co-operative landscape. It then defines the concept of business co-operatives and then draws upon the Visual Atlas of Australian Co-operatives History Project, which has developed a large database of Australian co-operatives over time and space, to examine the development of business co-operatives in Australia. It looks at where business co-operatives formed in the economy, the motivation underlying their formation, their average life span and relationship with the broader co-operative movement. The article highlights the value of business co-operatives in introducing the values of participatory democracy and working for the common good into unanticipated markets and reinforcing the co-operative movement.
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See moreWhile co-operatives are traditionally associated with workers, consumers and farmers, the business model, with its emphasis on democracy and community, has also been adopted by small business owners, the self-employed and professionals. These business co-operatives are distinct phenomenon because they primarily consist of independent organizational entities, which are not co-operatives and are generally in direct competition with each other. They are unique in that they bring together separate organisations that seek to combat market threats while adopting a philosophy based on co-operative principles.This article begins with an overview of the Australian co-operative landscape. It then defines the concept of business co-operatives and then draws upon the Visual Atlas of Australian Co-operatives History Project, which has developed a large database of Australian co-operatives over time and space, to examine the development of business co-operatives in Australia. It looks at where business co-operatives formed in the economy, the motivation underlying their formation, their average life span and relationship with the broader co-operative movement. The article highlights the value of business co-operatives in introducing the values of participatory democracy and working for the common good into unanticipated markets and reinforcing the co-operative movement.
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Date
2021Publisher
Enterprise and SocietyLicence
Copyright All Rights ReservedFaculty/School
The University of Sydney Business SchoolMacquarie University
University of Technology Sydney
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