Social and Solidarity Economy, Sustainable Development Goals, and Community Development: The Mission of Adult Education & Training
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The Social and Solidarity Economy and the Challenge of the 2030 Agenda
2.1. Approaching the Social and Solidarity Economy (SSE)
2.2. SSE and the 2030 Agenda Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs): Convergent Aims
3. Education in the Context of a SSE Aiming to Achieve the SDGs
3.1. Ontological Perspective (Being Well)
3.2. Functional Perspective (Living Well)
3.3. Operational Perspective (Doing Well)
3.4. Ecological Perspective (Caring Well)
4. Key for Change: Including the Principles and Values of Sustainability in the Educational and Training Projects
5. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Characteristics | Economic System | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Criteria | Public Initiative | Private Initiative | Social Initiative | |
Foundational | Principal actor | State | Market | Civil society, through social movements, social businesses, cooperatives etc. |
Rationale | Distribution | Competition | Cooperation, participation | |
Functional | Relationships based on | Authority | Exchange | Solidarity, reciprocity, collaboration |
Governance principle | Control | Private ownership | Ethical, participatory self-governance | |
Value creation | Common goods | Material goods | Common good, good living; socio-cultural, economic and environmental | |
Operational | Accountability | Inspection | Profits—shareholders | Investment of surplus—community |
Justification | Constitutional rights | Consumer rights | Human rights and needs/capacities for good living | |
Role of individual | Service beneficiary | Consumer | Co-creator of value for the community | |
Role of capital | Redistributive | Cumulative | Circular |
Criteria | World View | Time Frame | Problems to Resolve | Locus for Action and Attitude towards Globalisation | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Approaches | |||||
Alternative Economic Approaches | Social and Solidarity Economy | Common good (solidarity and reciprocity) | Short, medium and long-term | Prioritising profits over people Loss of ecological diversity Global warming Increasing inequality and lack of equal opportunities | Led by self-managed social entrepreneurs and some local governments Against globalising capitalism |
Green Capitalism | Free market (neo-liberal economy) | Short-term | Lack of economic growth, market failures, loss-making politics | Led by national and international institutions (IMF, World Bank, etc.) Tendency towards technologically mediated globalisation |
Productive Sector | Countries |
---|---|
Agriculture | 83% in The Netherlands, 79% in Finland, 55% in Italy, and 50% in France. |
Forestry | 60% in Sweden and 31% in Finland. |
Financial services | 50% in France, 37% in Cyprus, 35% in Finland, 31% in Austria and 21% in Germany. |
Retail | 36% in Finland and 20% in Sweden. |
Pharmacy and health | 21% in Spain and 18% in Belgium. |
Capacity for... | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Field | Cognitive | Understand the assumptions and inferences on which the social, political, cultural and ecological imaginary of the society and community is based | Question the values and principles that sustain different economic models and their legitimacy in the name of the ‘common good’ | Analyze in depth the complex nature of the sustainable development goals and critique every possible interpretation |
Psycho-affective | Reflect on the importance of making visible diverse ecologies, so as to understand other realities and knowledges that co-exist and interrelate in today’s world | Take decisions that empower people and communities around the social and environmental rights and duties they hold | Recognize and value other world-views such as those of Ubunto, Djunta Mon, Allin Kausay, Sumaq Qamana, or Mborayhu, which state that we are how we relate to what others are, and we are well as long as others are well | |
Operational | Apply effective techniques for combating monoculture which assumes difference to be inferior and as such denies it, renders it invisible or rejects it | Exercise ethical and facilitative leadership to promote consensus and democratic participation in decision making and community actions | Relate basic human needs (sustenance, protection, affection, understanding, participation, leisure, historical and spiritual transcendence) with sustainable and ethical satisfiers | |
Axiological | Cultivate ethical leadership and commitment through coherent action, awareness and responsibility for the consequences of this in my community | Be critical of all knowledge that alienates human dignity and compromises good living | Foster the values and principles of the SSE and the SDGs: the economy and development should serve people and their ecosystems |
Capacity for... | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Field | Cognitive | Identify the vital elements making up the ecosystem in which the community lies | Understand the impact of different forms of intervention for regenerating and recuperating community resources in a sustainable way | Identify and analyse the external and internal factors that make community interventions successful or not |
Psycho-affective | Develop activities that generate trust and empower people to take on sustainable, intergenerational community initiatives | Promote political identity and a sense of belonging to a community, through actual and/or virtual presence | Deconstruct socio-economic behaviours in order to understand the motivations underpinning collective commitment | |
Operational | Apply participatory methods and dynamics to define indicators that value the community’s social capital | Facilitate and design participatory budgets to achieve equity and socio-economic equality among community members | Apply strategies, techniques, and dynamics that counteract unsustainable community practices, both traditional and modern | |
Axiological | Foster collective living based on reciprocity and solidarity that benefits individual and collective interests as much as possible | Account for tangible and intangible results of paperwork carried out on the community’s behalf | Identify past, present, and future community values, and how these have been/can be put into practice in the community to guarantee good living |
Capacity for... | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Field | Cognitive | Understand innovative processes in the organisation and management of social enterprises | Know and understand what makes a culture of enterprise and innovation create sustainability in social/community initiatives | Know the best way of diversifying the community’s labour, production, and social markets, taking fair distribution of work into account |
Psycho-affective | Explore perceptions of a problem in order to implement certain solutions and required changes alongside the people affected | Assess and determine the best options for SSE organisations’ reinvestment of surplus in the organisation and in my community | Develop processes for the inclusion of differently-abled people, migrants, and refugees | |
Operational | Apply social innovation techniques and processes to create sustainable products and/or services within and outside my community | Design effective campaigns for communicating the benefits of the products, services, and ideas offered by my social enterprise and/or movement | Carry out social audits of eco-community enterprises and initiatives | |
Axiological | Contrast the social and environmental standards of the activities I promote for creating decent employment with the tools that are internationally accepted | Ethical responsibility of sustainable use of resources all along the value chain of a product and/or service offered | Promote responsible consumption through fair trade locally and globally |
Capacity for... | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Field | Cognitive | Understand, analyse, and identify interactions within a socio-ecological system (SES) | Understand the community’s capacity for SSE resilience through innovating and regenerating | Analyse effective practices for reducing the environmental footprint of one’s enterprise activities |
Psycho-affective | Understand how experiencing natural disasters wrought by climate change affect physical and mental health | Promote cross-cutting gender equality and equal opportunities in the short, medium, and long term | Promote citizens’ participation for restoring ecological habitats in the community | |
Operational | Foster ecological behaviours that have a positive and lasting impact on the surrounding area | Revive traditional modes of production (textiles, organic products) that respect the environment and create decent work | Start time-banks, foodbanks, tool libraries, community fridges | |
Axiological | Value traditions and traditional practices that allow humans to connect with nature and their surroundings | Denounce corrupt practices and abuses of power detrimental to the conservation of natural resource | Promote responsible production in line with the ecosystem’s capacity |
Competencies | Working Definition |
---|---|
Systems thinking competency | the abilities to recognise and understand relationships; to analyse complex systems; to think of how systems are embedded within different domains and different scales; and to deal with uncertainty. |
Anticipatory competency | the abilities to understand and evaluate multiple futures—possible, probable and desirable; to create one’s own visions for the future; to apply the precautionary principle; to assess the consequences of actions; and/or deal with risks and changes. |
Normative competency | the abilities to understand and reflect on the norms and values that underline one’s actions and to (negotiate) ensure the survival of sustainability values, principles, and to negotiate goals, and targets, in a context of conflicts of interests and trade-offs, uncertain knowledge, and contradiction. |
Strategic competency | the abilities to collectively develop and implement innovative actions that further sustainability at the local level and further afield. |
Collaboration competency | the abilities to learn from others; to understand and respect the needs, perspectives, and actions of others (empathy); to understand, relate to, and become sensitive to others (empathic leadership); to deal with conflicts in a group; and to facilitate collaborative and participatory problem solving. |
Critical thinking competency | the ability to question norms, practices and opinions; to reflect on own one’s values, perceptions, and action, and to take a position in the sustainability discourse. |
Self-awareness competency | the ability to reflect on one’s own role in the local community and (global) society; to continually be motivated to take action and to deal with one’s feelings and desires. |
Integrated problem-solving competency | the overarching ability to apply different problem-solving frameworks to complex sustainability problems and develop viable, inclusive, and equitable solutions and options that promote sustainable development, integrating the above-mentioned competences. |
Normative Competency the Competence to Understand the World Economy Systems and Reflect on the Norms and Values that Underpin a Sustainable Development through SSE Organisations, e.g., Social and Community Enterprises, Cooperatives, Time-Banks, etc. | |||
---|---|---|---|
Capacities | Key Indicators of Achievement and Commitment | ||
Basic | Intermediate | Advanced | |
Understand the values and norms that regulate the prevailing economic systems: private, public, and social | Explain the terms and concepts related to the three economic systems and their differences | Critically evaluate the scale, reach, impact, and sustainability of each | Discuss the historical and ideological precedents of each system and its relation to sustainable development |
Demonstrate the relationship between SSE values with a just, equitable society | Identify the presence of SSE values (reciprocity, participation, redistribution, and subsidiarity) in social/community enterprises | Show evidence of how governance of social and community enterprises influences the good living of its workers and its community | Take on the responsibility of defending SSE values across community initiatives |
Link the SSE to the promotion of decent work | Describe in a clear and concise way the elements that comprise decent work in SSE organisations | Analyse and unpick what decent work is based on its defining characteristics | Evaluate and denounce any action that infringes on decent work |
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Quiroz-Niño, C.; Murga-Menoyo, M.Á. Social and Solidarity Economy, Sustainable Development Goals, and Community Development: The Mission of Adult Education & Training. Sustainability 2017, 9, 2164. https://doi.org/10.3390/su9122164
Quiroz-Niño C, Murga-Menoyo MÁ. Social and Solidarity Economy, Sustainable Development Goals, and Community Development: The Mission of Adult Education & Training. Sustainability. 2017; 9(12):2164. https://doi.org/10.3390/su9122164
Chicago/Turabian StyleQuiroz-Niño, Catalina, and María Ángeles Murga-Menoyo. 2017. "Social and Solidarity Economy, Sustainable Development Goals, and Community Development: The Mission of Adult Education & Training" Sustainability 9, no. 12: 2164. https://doi.org/10.3390/su9122164
APA StyleQuiroz-Niño, C., & Murga-Menoyo, M. Á. (2017). Social and Solidarity Economy, Sustainable Development Goals, and Community Development: The Mission of Adult Education & Training. Sustainability, 9(12), 2164. https://doi.org/10.3390/su9122164