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A Future for the Excluded
Job Creation and Income Generation by the Poor: Clodomir Santos de Morais and the Organization Workshop
A Future for the Excluded
Job Creation and Income Generation by the Poor: Clodomir Santos de Morais and the Organization Workshop
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Description
Clodomir Santos de Morais is to organizational and entrepreneurial literacy what his Brazilian confrere, Paulo Freire, is to ordinary literacy. This book introduces for the first time in English the experiences of grassroots development workers who have applied his ideas of the Organization Workshop (OW) and capacitation in highly diverse social settings. One of the most exciting aspects of de Morais's methods of working with the most marginalized sectors of society is their relevance not just to Third World countries, but also to Eastern Europe's economies in transition and the most deprived areas of the industrialized countries.
This highly distinctive grassroots development approach to empowering socially excluded strata in economic and organizational terms holds out the prospect of becoming a very important factor in the struggle against poverty.
Table of Contents
Part I: Context and History
1. Setting the Scene: 'Those who don't eat and those who don't sleep' - Raff Carmen and Miguel Sobrado
2. Clodomir Santos de Morais and the Origins of his Largescale Capacitation Theory and Method - Miguel Sobrado
Part II: Theoretical Perspectives
3. The Largescale Capacitation Method and Social Participation: Theoretical Perspectives - Clodomir Santos de Morais
4. From Paulo Freire to Clodomir Santos de Morais: From Critical to Organizational Consciousness - Jacinta Castello Branco Correia
Part III: The Organization Workshop in Practice
5. From Navvies to Entrepreneurs: The Organization Workshop in Costa Rica - Miguel Sobrado
6. Sacked Agricultural Workers Take on the Multinationals in Honduras - Benjamin Erazo
7. The Mexican Experience with Organization Workshops - Juan Jose Rojas Herrera
8. The Organization Workshop in Panama, Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador and Peru - Miguel Sobrado
9. Three Decades of Work with OWs in Latin America: An Institutional Perspective - Leopoldo Sandoval
10. 'Doing Enterprises' in war-time and post-war Mozambique - Isabel and Ivan de Labra
11. In Angola, Guinea Bissau, Sao Tome and Principe - Paulo Roberto da Silva
12. Hard Learning in Zimbabwe and in post civil-war Mozambique - Isabel and Ivan Labra
13. Organization Development (OD) and Morais's Organization Workshop (OW) - South Africa and Botswana - Gavin Andersson
14. The Potential of the the OW in former Soviet Bloc Countries and Economies in Crisis - Miguel Sobrado
15. In Post-Salazar Portugal - Isabel and Ivan Labra
16. The Crisis of Work in Post-Industrial Western Countries - Raff Carmen
Part IV: From Local OWs to National Employment Generation Systems
17. The Brazilian PROGEI-SIPGEIs - Jacinta C. B. Correia
18. 'More than a Job: A Future': The PAE Self-Employment Programme in Brazil - Walter Barelli
19. The OW and Civil Society Organizations in Brazil - Jacinta C. B. Correia
20. OW's Potential: Concluding Observations - Miguel Sobrado
Product details
| Published | 29 Feb 2008 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (PDF) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Pages | 257 |
| ISBN | 9781848131378 |
| Imprint | Zed Books |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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One of the few books to cross the boundary between social and organizational change, and a 'must' for all organization and social development practitioners.
Bill Cooke, Institute for Development Policy and Management, Manchester University.
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The kind of book that comes only once in a while. Important for progressive educators, community organizers, and all those concerned with non-formal education.
Carlos Alberto Torres, Latin American Center, UCLA
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In the link de Morais establishes between autonomy, self-organization, and creative
enterprise building may well lie feasible guidelines for the much needed task of thinking beyond development and the neoliberal economy.'
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The success of these worker-owned enterprises makes this book essential reading for anyone concerned with issues of poverty and development.
Frank Youngman, author of 'The Political Economy of Adult Education and Development'
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At last a book that offers the English-speaking world a window into a startling body of theory and practice on building democratic forms of economic organization.
Simon Zadek, New Economics Foundation, London
ONLINE RESOURCES
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