Women as Participants and Observers in the International Division of Labor
Money Pools in the Americas: The African Diaspora’s Legacy in the Social Economy
Dr. Hossein’s article is one in a collection from the Forum for Social Economics. Written by women from different countries they aim to deal with a range of division of labor asymmetries, with special emphasis on issues that women must face in different countries.
Abstract:
Money pools are ancient African traditions that speak to the functionality of getting things done by a historically oppressed group of people. The analysis for this study is based on 583 interviews in five Caribbean countries: Haiti, Grenada, Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago, and Guyana. African traditions of collectives reveal that Black people have long had money pools that focused on helping people thrive in commerce, including during the hard times of slavery and colonization. This research argues that throughout the Caribbean indigenous banking systems—with localized names such as susu, partner, meeting-turn, box-hand and sol—are long-standing ancient traditions that historically and currently are taking a bold stand against exclusionary financial systems. African-Caribbean people have an important legacy on the social economy through money pools. The ways in which persons of African descent organize in the social economy is vital to unravelling the market fundamentalist view that there is only a singular way to do business in society.
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