Co-operation and the Politics of Consumption

Ann: a conference in Sydney, 17 March 2006

Conference Announcement

Business and Labour History Group, School of Business, The University of Sydney
Women's College, University of Sydney

Friday 17 March 2006

The International Co-operative Alliance (ICA) defines a co-operative as 'an autonomous association of persons united voluntarily to meet their common economic, social and cultural needs and aspirations through a jointly-owned and democratically-controlled enterprise.' Five broad types, or traditions, of co-operative activity have developed internationally since the mid-nineteenth century: retail (or consumer); financial (or banking); agricultural; worker; and health, housing, childcare, social and community activities. Co-operatives provide 100 million jobs worldwide, 20 per cent more than multinational enterprises. This conference explores the history of the politics of co-operation in relation to consumer goods and financial services. Specific institutions include Starr-Bowkett societies, retail co-operatives and credit unions. There are speakers from Australia, Canada and the USA.

Programme:

9.30 - 10.00 Registration

10.00 - 10.45 Welcome and Introduction

Nikola Balnave (University of Western Sydney) and Greg Patmore (The University of Sydney), "The Politics of Consumption: An overview"

10.45 - 11.15 Morning Tea

11.15 - 12.15 Overseas Perspectives

Eugene Plawiuk (Canada) "'The New Age' Consumer Political Economics in the Early Twentieth Century; Distributism, Social Credit and the Co-operative Movement"

Steve Leikin (San Francisco State University), "Producers as Consumers: American Cooperators and the Labor Movement in the Gilded Age"

12.15 - 1.15 Lunch

1.15 - 2.45 Credit Unions and Star-Bowketts

Leanne Cutcher and Melissa Kerr (The University of Sydney) "'Not for Profit, Not for Charity, but for Service': Co-operativeness in the face of increasing competition in the Australian Credit Union Movement"

Elizabeth Macknight (University of Melbourne), "Responses to Change: Melbourne University Credit Union 1969-2006"

Maxine Darnell (University of New England), "Attaining the Australian Dream the Starr-Bowkett Way"

2.45 - 3.15 Afternoon Tea

3.15 - 4.15 Co-operatives

Erik Eklund (University of Newcastle), "The Empire's Imperial Geography: Australian co-operation as a transnational phenomenon"

Nikola Balnave (University of Western Sydney) and Greg Patmore (The University of Sydney), "Localism and Rochdale Co-operation: The Junee and District Co-operative"

4.15 - 4.30 Conclusion

Registration details available at blhg.econ.usyd.edu.au/CPC_conference/register.html and further details can be obtained from greg patmore at