Fr. 188.00

Sustainability and Community-Based Organizations - Cross-Cultural Cases

English · Hardback

Will be released 21.10.2025

Description

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This book describes how community-based organizations prioritize stakeholders access to basic needs, autonomy, and capabilities development. Through analysis of nineteen organizations across multiple sectors, including food, energy, healthcare, mobility, housing, and finance, the research highlights key organizational characteristics enabling this: primarily, ethical coordination and the ethos of prosociality, the genuine involvement of those most concerned, multidimensional goal and value systems, and practices of sharing, resource pooling and sufficiency.
The book argues that meeting everyone's basic needs with far lower resource and energy use than contemporary unsustainable arrangements, which drives limitless and unequal material growth, is possible and is foremost not a technological production challenge. Instead, sustainability efforts should be directed towards collective action. The community-based organizations in this study offer real-life cases of social arrangements protecting and nurturing the primacy of needs fulfillment against ideas and practices of limitless growth and ungeneralizable excess.
Combining theoretical framing with empirical case studies, this book will be of great interest to students, researchers, activists, practitioners, and policymakers engaged with sustainability. It offers actionable insights for transforming production-consumption systems to support human and ecological well-being.

List of contents

Chapter 1: Introduction.- Chapter 2: The Political Economy of Unsustainability.- Chapter 3: Historical Context of Collective Action.- Chapter 4: Prioritizing Needs: Case Studies of Community-Based Organizations.- Chapter 5: Mapping Community-based Organizations Characteristics.- Chapter 6: Addressing Research Questions and Way Forward.- Chapter 7: Summary and Conclusions.

About the author

Tamás Veress is an Assistant Professor at the Business Ethics Center and Corvinus Institute for Advanced Studies, Corvinus University of Budapest, Hungary. His research centers around analyzing and developing models prioritizing well-being and sufficiency as key elements in value creation. His teaching includes courses such as Sustainable Value Creation, Business Ethics, Business Opportunities, Digital (non) Disruption, and Decision Techniques. As a junior research fellow, he was involved with the Economy of Francesco Academy Fellowship Program. He also establishes and coordinates ecoclubs, community-driven groups committed to embracing sustainable lifestyles.

Summary

This book describes how community-based organizations prioritize stakeholders’ access to basic needs, autonomy, and capabilities development. Through analysis of nineteen organizations across multiple sectors, including food, energy, healthcare, mobility, housing, and finance, the research highlights key organizational characteristics enabling this: primarily, ethical coordination and the ethos of prosociality, the genuine involvement of those most concerned, multidimensional goal and value systems, and practices of sharing, resource pooling and sufficiency.
The book argues that meeting everyone's basic needs with far lower resource and energy use than contemporary unsustainable arrangements, which drives limitless and unequal material growth, is possible and is foremost not a technological production challenge. Instead, sustainability efforts should be directed towards collective action. The community-based organizations in this study offer real-life cases of social arrangements protecting and nurturing the primacy of needs fulfillment against ideas and practices of limitless growth and ungeneralizable excess.
Combining theoretical framing with empirical case studies, this book will be of great interest to students, researchers, activists, practitioners, and policymakers engaged with sustainability. It offers actionable insights for transforming production-consumption systems to support human and ecological well-being.

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