Toronto Community Book Launch: Commoning Labour and Democracy at Work
Across the world, workers and communities have responded to neoliberal restructuring, austerity, and economic crisis by taking over workplaces and converting them into worker-managed cooperatives and community-anchored enterprises. From Argentina’s worker-recuperated enterprises to experiments in worker cooperatives and democratic workplaces across Latin America, Europe, and North America, these initiatives have prefigured new ways of organizing work – grounded in solidarity, and collective ownership. They are turning workplaces into spaces of democracy and commons – a labour commons.
Join book authors, Dario Azzellini and Marcelo Vieta, and Special Guests: Andrés Ruggeri, professor at the University of Buenos Aires and director of the Documentation Center for Worker-Recuperated  Enterprises and invited labour organisations, cooperatives, and scholars from Toronto and southern Ontario, for this community–university gathering that uses the book Commoning Labour and Democracy at Work: When Workers Take Over as a starting point for a collective conversation about the possibilities and limits of building labour commons in Toronto today. The authors hope to begin a dialogue and movement-oriented discussion among labour, cooperative, and community actors in Toronto, that asks:
- How can we democratize and cooperativize more and more workplaces in Toronto?
- What can be learned and adapted from democratic workplaces and worker-recuperated enterprises elsewhere?
- What institutions, alliances, and infrastructures are needed to sustain democracy at work in a highly financialized, precarious urban economy?