e g e n g a n h a c h x c E Etx o to e g e n g a n h a C Ch COMMUNITY KNOWLEDGE AS COMMUNITY POWER
We would like to begin by acknowledging that the creators of this zine, as well as the organizations it explores, are occupying stolen land. Paige, Dafne, and Mayday Space are located on traditional Canarsie and Munsee Lenape land, Zainab on Matinecock and Munsee Lenape land, Elisa on unceded Algonquin Anishnaabe land, while GGJ's headquarters are situated on the to find out what native land you are on, confluence of Piscataway and check out this map Anacostan land.
This zine examines community education and knowledge sharing as a tool within intersectional community organizing and social justice movements as a whole. To do so, we decided to examine two organizations, Mayday Space and the Grassroots Global Justice Alliance
“Climate change, hydrocarbon energy depletion, water and resou production, inter- and intrastate conflict, escalating impoverishme malaise and declines in well-being, the legitimization of far-right their own individual developmental traje
(Ahme
We want to explore knowledge in a way that is accessible and inclusive. To showcase, explore, and operationalize the information we collect about the forms and nuances of community knowledge, we thought of a digital zine. Not only would this medium allow us to employ tools that are often overlooked in academic settings, such as storytelling and visual art, but creating a zine would also be fitting as it is a form of community knowledge sharing in itself
Neither organization is exclusively climate-oriented, but these non-climate focuses are equally important due to the interrelated nature of social and ecological issues
rce scarcity relative to exponential population growth, declining food ent and inequalities, growing instabilities in the global economy, social t politics, and normalization of political violence – do not only follow ectories, but are inherently interconnected.�
ed 2010, p. 2)
GLOBAL GRASSROOTS
JUSTICE ALLIANCE
Grassroots Global Justice (GGJ) is an alliance of over 60 US-based grassroots organizing (GRO) groups of working and poor people and communities of color. GGJ brings USbased GRO groups together with global social movements that are working for climate justice, gender justice, an end to war, and a just transition to a regenerative economy.
"Strategic Alignment and Joint Practice of the Grassroots Organizing Sector : Strengthening national and international grassroots movement building by facilitating tactical and strategic alignment and joint practice of the grassroots organizing (GRO) sector across regions and issues, and cohering the GRO sector with the visionary work of national and international allies."
"Grassroots Internationalism: Develop the capacity for GROs to engage strategically with movements abroad by bringing these leaders together to form working relationships and a reciprocal solidarity model. This helps US movements learn about how popular movements abroad are defining and implementing strategies for improving the lives of lowincome families, infusing their local and regional work with an international analysis. In turn, GGJ brings representatives from low-income, indigenous, and communities of color on the frontlines of the climate and economic crises from the US into international movement spaces."
"Transformational Leadership: Develop transformational leadership of the grassroots organizing sector, particularly for working and poor indigenous and communities of color, women and gender-oppressed people, and working-class white people through exposure to global movements on international trips, one on one leadership development, trainings, evaluation, and political analysis."
"Political and Popular Education with a deliberate race, gender, and class framework: Raise critical consciousness, especially around the impacts of climate change on low-income families of color, working-class communities and gender-oppressed people, around the Just Transition model for a feminist economy. Sharpen our movement’s historical analysis, theory and organizing strategies to apply to current conditions."
GGJ's Theory of Change in four parts
content credit: ggjalliance.org
“Mayday Space is a multi-story organizing center and social hub in Bushwick that works in tandem with our sister space Starr Bar a short walk away. Mayday is both a neighborhood resource and a citywide destination for engaging programming, a home for radical ideas and debate, and a welcoming gathering place for people and movements to work, learn, celebrate and build together. As an organizing center and events space for grassroots organizations to host their fundraiser parties, leadership retreats, and more, Mayday inspires and sustains a justice-oriented community that is both publicly identifiable and approachable. We’ve created an innovative model that connects to the solidarity economy, promotes a shared sense of stewardship, and attracts new individuals to social justice politics in a culturallydynamic setting". (Mayday, 2020)
"The vision of the solidarity economy is to go beyond government or private sector welfare or protections and instead lift up ‘people collectively finding ways to provide for themselves and their communities’ (Kawano, 2018: 22)." (Di Chiro, 2019, p. 310)
to build collective power, and to push for broader systemic change. We are a space where movements come together to reflect on strategy, tactics, what we're up against, and the better world we’re fighting for" (Mayday, 2020)
“We know that a radically more just, equitable, and democratic New York City is possible. Mayday is a resource for activists and organizers working to envision and promote alternatives to current injustices,
"Mayday is a hub, not necessarily one home, but there to support all these various homes that exist."-Rahel Biru
"As a movement project, Mayday also works with long-time community organizers to amplify neighborhood issues such as immigrant rights, food justice, tenant protections, gentrification, and displacement as well as broader global issues such as climate justice and Internet freedom. To carry out this work, we’ve co-created empowering leadership structures for collectively managing the space and shaping the direction of our programming and organizing projects.
By offering access to our space on a sliding scale (down to free access), we prioritize people of color, immigrants, women-led groups, LGBTQ, poor and working-class communities. The programming events Mayday welcomes and curates ourselves likewise centers the voices, creativity, and leadership of frontline communities.” (Mayday, 2020)
We believe that movement building is grounded in the development of grassroots organizations & leadership development to achieve local, national, and global justice. We believe in building relationships of solidarity between and among organizations in the United States and across the world. We have much to learn from and share with our international allies. We believe that as US based organizations, we must be committed to building a strong enough movement to prevent the US government and US corporations from suppressing popular movements and interfering in the internal affairs of other countries. We believe in creating opportunities for convergence that facilitate resource sharing, popular and political education, skill sharing and dialogue between organizations. We believe in joint action, that acting together in the U.S. and globally we have more power to create social change. We believe by working together – Another World is Possible, a world based on the principles of international solidarity, justice, peace, dignity, equality, human rights, sustainability and democracy! (GGJalliance,2020)
THE PEOPLE:
photo credit: @ggjalliance instagram
ONE MOVEMENT, MANY VOICES "GGJ is committed to an organizational structure under the direction of a Coordinating Committee (CC) elected by the membership, a Board of Directors comprised of current and past member leaders, and a staff team to support implementation of the direction of our work decided on by the membership at Membership Assemblies. "(GGJAlliance,2020)
"The populations represented by GGJ's membership reflect a broad US cross-section: informal sector workers, domestic workers, public school & garment factory workers and other reproductive laborers in Florida, Texas, New Mexico, California, Washington, Michigan; youth organizers in Philadelphia; veterans against war across the US; Indigenous peoples in northern Arizona, across the northern plains and great lakes regions and in Alaska; migrant workers, worker centers and worker-owned cooperative projects in North Carolina, Jackson MI, Florida, Boston, rural Washington, Vermont and Southern Maine; environmental justice organizers in New York City, Providence, Albuquerque, Detroit, Seattle, South/Southeast Texas, Northern & Southern California, Alaska; and organizers who fight for housing, immigrant, environmental and economic rights in the San Francisco Bay Area." (GGJAlliance,2020)
photo credit: Mayday Space Facebook
THE PEOPLE:
The Mayday Collective is "where the rubber hits the road." They make the majority of the decisions for the organization. The Collective cares for the overall mission and furthering Mayday's social justice agenda.
Mayday is a peoplepowered project run by a volunteer Collective in tandem with various organizing projects, a slew of other friends, collaborators, area residents and our small staff
are hired hands that assist with the day to day functions of the organization and work to follow through on Mayday's specific tasks and goals.
Staff
Mayday mostly relies on their 40+ to curate and host events Volunteers and to keep the space growing as an affordable resource. Volunteers are also radicalized and sent to support other grassroots movements Mayday partners with.
Members are Mayday financial supporters, donating as little as $5/month, who also get merch, discounts, and invitations to special events. These usually include nonprofits and movement spaces.
Smaller Grassroots Groups & Bushwick Locals are not often able to financially support, but are the ones using the space the most, primarily for art and fundraising.
One of Mayday's many goals for the next year is to expand their constituency.
Photo credit: @maydayspace on Instagram
GGJ provides resources through manifestos, political education, toolkits and reports in a way that is accessible and concise. GGJ employs different forms of knowledge, both written and oral (through video and webinars)
NON-HEGEMO
In our interview with Sandra Moran, we talked about the Feminist Organizing Schools and the types of knowledge/learning involved
what is the root of your meaning, what keeps you going?
"The Feminist Organizing School provides a space for grassroots leaders to create a shared vision for the grassroots internationalist feminist movement we hope to build. At the Feminist Organizing School, we explore the theoretical and historical intersections of patriarchy, homophobia, transphobia, white supremacy and climate change; and a vision of a feminist future, including development of a feminist economy. We also support each other in the task of bringing a feminist agenda to our daily work. Our majority women of color training team uses a Train the Trainers model so leaders can replicate the curriculum in their local or regional contexts.To address the greater need for political and popular education during this groundswell of women’s mobilization, we are exploring regional and thematic schools, based on the national model.” (GGJAlliance,2020)
The Feminist Organizing Schools use a popular education style the body and sexualitythe body as the first territory of resistance
the community is the base of knowledge and development
recognize that indigenous women have ancestral knowledge
Talking about symbols, colors, history, Sandra integrates creative and intersectional forms in teaching/learning. She mentions the quilt as another powerful tool for women to get together and sew together. She says: “You can develop or reveal the meaning and tool of everything. everything!! Because everything has meaning!” photo credit: ggjalliance.org
(quotes in icons are by Sandra Moran from our interview)
"Feminist thinking provides a lucid means of comprehending patriarchy as a mind-set of domination" (Adelman,, 2015, p. 13)
ONIC KNOWLEDGE
Mayday’s events and programming are their events space broken up into 3 categories
Mayday makes available (on a sliding scale) to individuals, grassroots groups, and organizations with aligned leftist missions and focus on issues of gentrification, police brutality, mass incarceration, language justice, degrowth, climate justice, and black liberation among others, for their own programming. (60% of events)
Co-host events with social justice partners. This happens when Mayday is particularly interested in the topic and in helping facilitate and assist the event to make a big event. (20-25% of events) Mayday, alone, curates and hosts some events, such as Social Justice Markets and Meals for the Movement Community Cookbook. Even here, the community, members and movements are brought together to participate in the market. (20-25%)
Photo credit: @maydayspace on Instagram
“The material commons flows into an ideational commons, as ‘scientific knowledge, like traditional knowledge, is also part of the Commons, freely accessible to each and everyone,'” (Goodman & Salleh, 2013, p. 419)
Photo credit: @maydayspace on Instagram
Photo credit: @maydayspace on Instagram
As explained to us by Rahel, "Mayday is all about the participatory." The hub strives to be by and for the people of its Bushwick community and the greater Brooklyn area.
Programming is chosen and developed collaboratively by the core group of volunteers and collective through annual ideation gatherings and monthly planning gatherings. They sift through submissions for event ideas and determine what needs to be focused on and what groups need to be brought in. Usually, these groups are ones that Mayday has previously worked with or who have booked the space. While the collective is the ultimate deciding voice, most of the ideas come from volunteers.
"Mayday is all about the participatory" -Rahel Biru
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Mayday fosters alternative and accessible non-hegemonic knowledge in a number of ways. Currently, the side of their building is home to an interactive art installation featuring both global and local artists, the art contains a qr code to an episode of Papergirl Brookln's podcast on Bushwick, featuring an interview and conversation with Mayday Space collective member Pati Rodriguez discussing community engagement and organizing
A GLOCAL GGJ IS A GLOBAL NETWORK WORKING
Different cultures, politics, languages; but we find (which is not surprising) that we talk about the same problems- discrimination, racism, misogyny, racism etc. we need to understand the north-south divide, the interconnection, we can get together and talk about the whole system. It’s complex but a beautiful exercise. We as women we develop our own tools and confront the oppression we live in. when you share those tools, they can be used against the system in your life. Sharing knowledge and applying tools to different regions. You develop a historical view, an anti systemic view, and emancipatory view. Even now, in the COVID time, you can see things more clear. - Sandra Moran,
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"We recognize the global dimensions of the root causes of social injustice. GGJ develops the capacity for GROs to engage strategically with movements abroad in what we call Grassroots Internationalism by bringing these leaders together in a working relationship and a reciprocal solidarity model, such as connecting movement leaders fighting against the destruction of hydroelectric dams in Latin America with community members organizing around solutions to water shut offs in low income communities of Detroit. Since 2003, over 1,000 U.S.-based grassroots organizers have gone on GGJ international delegations, returning inspired, more politically developed and implementing lessons they learned into their campaigns and program." (GGJAlliance, 2020)
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WITH LOCAL ORGANIZATIONS
photo credit: ggjalliance.org
We interviewed Sandra Moran, International Feminist Political Education Coordinator. Lesbian, revolutionary, feminist, militant and defender of women’s rights, sexual diversity, Indigenous Peoples, and youth. She has founded and has belonged to several grassroots women’s organizations; and she cofounded the Alianza Política Mujeres (Women’s Political Alliance) in 1994, which contributed to visibilizing women’s proposals in the Peace AccordsFrom 2016 to January 2020, she was a Representative to the Congress of the Republic of Guatemala, being the first lesbian elected for that post in the history of Guatemala. "In the era of ‘globalization’, it no longer makes much sense to speak of ‘outsides’ and
global processes that are dominated by a core network of states, corporations, and (Ahmed 2010
MOVEMENT Mayday focuses more on hyper-local work for their Bushwick and greater Brooklyn community, but they aim to become a hub for any grassroots group visiting, from New York or worldwide, in need of a place. Mayday's main resource is their physical building which they refer to as providing, "infrastructure for the movement" to all organizations and community members in need.
mayday space is
Mayday's other greatest asset is its growing community of members and volunteers which they count on to assist in both funding and with ideas and aspirations for future programming. Rahel Biru, a collective member and caretaker of Mayday Space, described their constituency and the way they operate as "spokes of a bicycle wheel" that continuously turn as the members support whichever organization or demonstration is in need.
"infrastructure for the
movement"
Gunduz describes the structures of “care chains and care drains” on a global scale, in “The Feminization of Migration”, in which those responsible for care work are stretched too thin and a void of care is created, but this concept also exists on a local level in that there are often not enough bodies to do the work. Mayday’s efforts are in reversing it.
-Rahel Biru
Mayday Space has close working partnerships with various organizations and hubs in Brooklyn. Their sister space, Starr Bar, donates a portion of their proceeds to Mayday monthly and acts as a secondary space for more social events. Mayday works in close collaboration with organizations such as Mi Casa Resiste, Bushwick Mutual Aid, Frack Outta Brooklyn, No North Brooklyn Pipeline, and many others.
Photo credit: @maydayspace on Instagram
Mayday’s hyper-local work is still very much global. As Ahmed asserts in "A User’s Guide to the Crisis of Civilization in the era of globalization," local events must be understood in relation to global processes. Mayday’s hyper-local work is in response to local issues such as gentrification, displacement, environmental justice, policing, and mass incarceration, which we know are embedded in the global hegemonic system. Thus Mayday’s local work and power-building contribute to the global fight against these issues by other local groups.
d ‘insides’. We have to understand local events in relation to global processes– institutions.The real threat to civilization is not from outside.It is from itself." 0, p. 3)
GGJ is committed to language justice GGJ's website is offered in Arabic, Chinese, Dutch, English, French, German, Italian, Portuguese, Russian, and Spanish
The International Feminist Schools work in 4 languages: English, French, Spanish, Portuguese, which are colonial languages photo credit: @ggjalliance instagram
Beyond which languages are spoken, it's important to understand the level of formality in the language, its socio-political context and the importance it holds
When speaking to Sandra Moran about the use of language in GGJ’s programming, she said it perfectly: "language is not just words, language is
it becomes clear that language reveals one's ideological grounding and the power dynamics those ideologies are embedded in
This is highly compatible with DiChiro’s call to reevaluate and re-define ‘care’ as well as with the concept of coloniality that Adelman discusses.
As part of Mayday and Mutual Aid NYC’s weekly All Neighborhoods “Language justice Calls during Summer 2020, is the right for everyone to they facilitated a call communicate in the language they on Multilingual feel most comfortable - being able to express themselves, their ideas, to be Access & Outreach understood and to be able to within mutual aid participate." organizing. “language determines who can/cannot receive mutual aid - not just spoken, but process itself can be a barrier”
Speaker Amna Khan From DRUM
Language Within MayDay's Work: Mayday has translation services at some events in partnership with Mi Casa Resiste, however, they are aiming to further their accessibility in events in terms of language, closed captioning, and access..
Speaker Alba Mota from Caracol Language Coop
They are also working on being more cognizant and intentional about the type of language used in terms of informal, formal, academic, etc. Academic speak sometimes comes through on their fliers and social media due to their non-profit partnerships and staff members' educational backgrounds, but with their main political partner, Mi Casa Resiste, the language used in materials and events is much more accessible/informal.
However, according to Rahel Biru, Mayday collective member, host & caretaker, sometimes technical/complex terminology does need to be a part of political education. For example, certain terminology needs to be explained when sharing knowledge on the North Brooklyn Pipeline.
In response to the COVID19 pandemic, GGJ along with their sister alliances at It Takes Roots, hosted a series of 3 calls weekly to connect with their people and understand the covid19 crisis and learn from organizations and movements around the world that are responding to this crisis.
Speakers Susan, ED of Femena, organization that aims to support women human rights defenders (WHRDs), their organizations and their movements in the MENA and Asia region.
What does knowledge, com look like during a pandemic, toget
Iranian people and the iranian women movement is very isolated and it's never been this isolated and needs solidarity...With economic issues and the pandemic, the sectors supporting these women rights movements shifted priority and focused on food and basic needs and saw womens rights as a luxury
Anna Cha, at MST, Brazilian landless rural workers mass social movement focused on cultural and political education, struggles for land and people and agrarian reform and partner of La Via Campesina.
Under Covid19 MST served as mutual aid, providing relief for masses, turning schools into hospitals... Because Bolsonaro is not responding to covid crisis and there is a lack of government relief, MST is filling in building ‘dual power’”... we are uniting struggles and speaking against exploitation of this humanitarian planetary tragedy. We must speak with our voices. We need to reinvent the way of doing struggle because most of it is going to the streets. MST is globalizing the struggle and hope
Doctor Priscilla Settee, professor of indigenous studies at University of Manitoba, member of Cumberland House Cree First Nations from northern Saskatchewan
Civil society networks are trying to pick up where the government has left off... We must recognize the important role of research on food systems and resilience so that we become more prepared for another crisis like COVID19 and not give into the neoliberal agenda cutback on really important research.. This is the moment to build the biggest movement against the system. We need to be more effective in building knowledge
Dae-Ha Song from International Strategy Center in South Korea which “...we need to imagine an endless growth, green or otherwise. It is the multitude of deeply engaged stimulates and inspires exchange of undeterred by the incessant drumbeat proclaiming ‘there are no alternatives’ ideas of social movements in South and fo Korea and abroad.
mmunity sharing and care , when we are not physically her ?
Mayday is working to improve accessibility to their virtual Most of Mayday’s events have gone virtual events, which Their premium zoom account shared w/ orgs to host their own virtual programming have mostly been Their own virtual classes like yoga, race & on zoom until revolutions class, reading club, writing now, by workshop, world of witches virtual market Zoom town halls broadcasting All Neighborhood Calls w/ Mutual Aid NYC across youtube and facebook live.
Non-virtual Actions: local business flyering outdoor documentary screening while Mi Casa + Mayday volunteers were participating in sleep-in at Knickerbocker Plaza over the summer orgs who really need the physical space, and who have a relationship with Mayday have been given access to the space
Worked with bushwick mutual aid to bag groceries for families in need during the pandemic include zines in each food package about tenants rights, free mental health services, immigration & other important COVID era information
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“[A] response [to the COVID-19 crisis], one closest to degrowth in practice, has been to instantly set up neighborhood-based mutual aid networks to provide for those ignored and discarded by the state. [...] This response of strangers rapidly responding, to the best of their ability, to the needs of disabled people; imprisoned people; unhoused people; immunocompromised people; undocumented people; poor people, reflected the principles of degrowth.” -(Tyberg, 2020, p. 8) ne and build a new paradigm of care – not
community based networks envisioning new human-earth-climate relationships, that is . The flourishing of new stories showcasing the many alternatives to caring for each other mate” -(Di Chiro, 2019, p. 310)
The convergence of crises
GGJ has an intersectional, decolonial anti capitalist, and global approach to build collective action through the framework:
No War! No Warming! Build an Economy for the People and the Planet GGJ focuses on four themes/programs, which are interconnected:
Global wellbeing Based on the concept of buen vivir focusing on two core priorities: 1.Strengthen the Climate Justice movement nationally and internationally. 2. Actualize the Just Transition (JT) model on the ground.
Anti-militarism -With a central commitment to grassroots internationalism, GGJ has long understood the "relationship between the war at home and the wars abroad " -Standing up against US imperial intervention globally
Grassroots feminism Build a just transition to a feminist economy
National and International Movementbuilding - International and national movement-building, through It Takes Roots and Rising Majority programs - "Develop the capacity for US-based orgs to engage with movements abroad, through a reciprocal solidarity model where US movements learn about popular movements"
and collective action for justice Most of Mayday’s programming and actions are NOT CLIMATE-BASED. Mayday focuses predominantly on actions to support their surrounding community, but within our current globalized world, all of these crises become interconnected to one another and thus Mayday works to encompass and host for a variety of issues.
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As MayDay is place-based in the very gentrified neighborhood of Bushwick, they prioritize issues of:
”Degrowth is the unlearning formula consisting of care, autonomy, and sufficiency” (Tyberg, 2020, p.4)
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We would like to thank Sandra Moran, International Feminist Political Education Coordinator for GGJ, and Rahel Biru, caretaker and collective member for Mayday Space, for taking time out of their busy schedules to sit down and speak with us, and for all the incredible work they do through their respective organizations. We would also like to thank Professor Leonardo Figueroa-Helland for his guidance and support throughout this project, and for sharing his knowledge with us throughout this semester. Finally, we would like to thank every member, organization or individual, of these organizations and beyond, for their commitments to nonhegemonic alternatives, knowledgesharing, and community/global betterment.
Adelman, S., (2015) The Epistemologies of Mastery in: Research Handbook on Human Rights and the Environment, 9-27. Ahmed, N. M. (2010). Introduction. In A User’s Guide to the Crisis of Civilization and How to Save it. Pluto Press London. Biru, R. (2020, December 4). [Pesonal Interview by P. Burr & Z. Koli]. Di Chiro, G. (2019). Care not growth: Imagining a subsistence economy for all. British Journal of Politics and International Relations, 21(2), 303–311. GGJ Alliance. (2020, April 10). Beyond Recovery, Beyond Borders Final Shaping Change Together Call. Youtube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i9eetWNX5OM Goodman, J., & Salleh, A. (2013). The “Green Economy”: Class Hegemony and CounterHegemony. In Globalizations (Vol. 10, Issue 3, pp. 411–424). Grassroots Global Justice Alliance. (n.d.). Grassroots Global Justice (@ggjalliance). Instagram. Retrieved December 20, 2020, from https://www.instagram.com/ggjalliance/ Grassroots Global Justice Alliance. (2020). Grassroots Global Justice Alliance. https://ggjalliance.org/ Gündüz, Z. Y. (2013). The Feminization of Migration: Care and the New Emotional Imperialism. Monthly Review, 65, 32-43. Mayday – A home for movements, social justice activism, and community events. (2020). Mayday Space. https://maydayspace.org/ Mayday Space. (n.d.). Mayday Space (@maydayspace). Instagram. Retrieved December 20, 2020, from https://www.instagram.com/maydayspace/ Mayday Space. (2020). Mayday Space Handbook. https://docs.google.com/document/d/1W5p9AKFbHGLUhZKY_zfGxVontKbvg2ZopSfIHQoaa SU/edit?usp=sharing Moran, S. (2020, November 30). [Interview by D. Yeltekin & E. Soto-Danseco]. Mayday Space. (2020, May 27). Multilingual Access & Outreach - NYC Mutual Aid All Neighborhoods Call. Youtube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OxuJmUK2CGQ Papergirl-Brooklyn, Papergirl Radio: Bushwick. (2020) https://www.papergirlbk.com/bushwick Tyberg, J. (2020). Unlearning: From Degrowth To Decolonization. Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung, New York Office.
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