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building local economies
     Tools For Change Training Seminars


Building Sustainable Local Economies
Tools for Change Training Seminar

Information regarding the 2010 Seminar TBA

Reading List 2006-2007
Additional Reading 2008

May 21st to 25th, 2008
At the E. F. Schumacher Library and Bard College at Simon's Rock

Tuition Cost: $600 - this includes materials and seven meals
Housing Cost: $400 - this includes breakfasts and four nights stay at Simon's rock

Click here to register and pay by check
Click here to register and pay by credit card

Workshops with Eric Harris-Braun, Elizabeth Keen, Chris Lindstrom, Kirkpatrick Sale, Alex Thorp, Charles Turner, Susan Witt, and other guest speakers

How can regional communities regain the power to revitalize the means of production for basic necessities (food, energy, shelter, clothing) in the face of a deepening economic, social, and ecological crisis? Join us this May to learn about successful, citizen-driven models for community revitalization and how to take action in applying them to your own community.

Featuring a Public Lecture by Joseph Stanislaw

Workshops for Seminar Attendees

E. F. Schumacher's Philosophy of Small is Beautiful

The philosophy underlying the work of building strong regionally-based economies, shaped by the democratic participation of citizens with discussion of the evolution of this concept through the programs of the E. F. Schumacher Society.

Community Land Trust Model

Using the community land trust model as a means to creating affordable access to land for housing and other purposes while ensuring equity in the buildings for the owners, including legal structure and visits to community land trust sites.

Community Development Financing Systems & Local Currencies

Creating wealth on a regional level through self-financing, micro-credit and local currency issues using Deli-Dollars, Berkshire Farm Preserve Notes, SHARE Micro-credit, and BerkShares as examples.

Community Self-Management & Diversification of Wealth

How a community can become a "social entrepreneur" and the role that producer/consumer associations can play in establishing new business initiatives and community accountability, with an examination of the Mondragon worker-ownership model from the Basque region of Spain.

Developing Action Plans

Presentations by participants of how they plan to apply the tools for community economic development they have studied in the training session to the problems faced by their own communities.

Seminar Costs

The tuition fee is $600.00, which includes tuition, materials, and seven meals (4 lunches, 3 dinners), featuring food from local farms.  Participation is limited to 25 people, so please reserve as soon as possible by sending in the registration card and payment.

The housing fee is $400.00, which includes breakfast and 4 nights housing in a single dorm room with shared bath at Simon's Rock College.  Simon's Rock is conveniently located in Great Barrington, and is the site of our evening sessions.  Alternatively, you may arrange a stay on your own at one of the many Bed & Breakfasts or Inns in the Berkshires.  The Southern Berkshire Chamber of Commerce has a contact list available at www.southernberkshirechamber.com.  For further questions, please contact Michael Gordon, seminar coordinator, at efssociety@smallisbeautiful.org or (413) 528-1737.

Promisorry Note


To assist with financing your seminar attendance, please feel free to use the attached Promisorry Note when approaching individuals or organizations for sponsorship.

Information on the 2007 Seminar


The 2007 Tools for Change Training Seminar was held
May 23th-27th, 2007, Great Barrington, Massachusetts

with Erbin Crowell, Alan Glackman, Eric Harris-Braun, Elizabeth Keen, Christopher Lindstrom, Jennifer Sahn, Alex Thorp, Chuck Turner, Lawrence Union, and Susan Witt

Who attended? Those attending were interested in new and alternative models for revitalization of their local economy. They came from all over the country and from a variety of backgrounds.

More information on the 2007 Seminar, including seminar program, schedule, and faculty bios. See our suggested reading list or visit our publications page. Note that this information is not for the upcoming seminar, but refers to the seminar session held in 2007.

 

seminar

View photographs from the 2007 Seminar:
Image Index

View photographs from the 2006 seminar:
Slide Show | Image Index
Greta's Wedding Photos!
Read the 2006 seminar report

View photographs from the 2005 seminar:
Slide Show | Image Index
View Rainbow photograph
Read the 2005 seminar report

To be informed of future seminars be sure to join our mailing list by sending your name via our membership page




About the E. F. Schumacher Society


The E. F. Schumacher Society's mission is to create the foundations for a new economy based on the responsibility to ecological and human necessities, the decentralization of power, and democratic participation. We envision a future in which rural and urban villages around the world attain greater economic self-determination, providing necessities of food, clothing, shelter, and energy from regional resources for local consumption in a more equitable manner. Such an economy will foster non-violent living patterns, creating the foundation for global peace.

The Society initiates both practical models for change in our community in Western Massachusetts, and also educates and empowers others to transform their own communities. In our region we have created a model community land trust that provides affordable housing, preserves land for organic family farming, and conserves important wetland and forest areas. We have also developed an innovative micro-lending program, several types of local currency, and an initiative that saved the first CSA in North America as a working farm. In addition, we house the E. F. Schumacher library, a unique collection of books and papers on decentralist thought, including E. F. Schumacher's personal collection.

Building from our local work, we share our ideas and models with community-based organizers all over the world. We host an annual lecture series with visionary leaders and conduct events, such as our 2004 "Local Currencies in the 21st Century" conference that attracted 300 people from over 17 countries. We have published our lectures in over 50 individual pamphlets and collected in People, Land and Community, from Yale University Press.