2014
DOI: 10.1080/13549839.2013.855892
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Cultivating hybrid collectives: research methods for enacting community food economies in Australia and the Philippines

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Cited by 28 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…explores how ethical economic decision making in a government-led local food project in the Philippines is generating social surplus, creating and sustaining commons and building a community-based food economy (Cameron, Gibson, and Hill 2014). In the area of renewable energy, Cameron and Hicks (2014) discuss the decisions that community-based renewable energy initiatives are making in terms of how they generate and distribute surplus, while Gibson-Graham, Cameron, and Healy (2016) discuss the synergistic relationship between an emerging market for solar technologies and the unexpected uptake of household solar energy in Australia.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…explores how ethical economic decision making in a government-led local food project in the Philippines is generating social surplus, creating and sustaining commons and building a community-based food economy (Cameron, Gibson, and Hill 2014). In the area of renewable energy, Cameron and Hicks (2014) discuss the decisions that community-based renewable energy initiatives are making in terms of how they generate and distribute surplus, while Gibson-Graham, Cameron, and Healy (2016) discuss the synergistic relationship between an emerging market for solar technologies and the unexpected uptake of household solar energy in Australia.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…What might be gained by incorporating nonmonetary exchange; that is, the direct trading of goods and services (the US barter market is currently estimated at $12 billion annually)? How might generative justice contribute to the analysis of frameworks already utilizing these concerns, such as "solidarity economy" (Kawano et al, 2010); "real utopias" (Wright, 2013); "community economy" (Cameron et al, 2014); "non-extractive economy" (Grady-Benson & Sarathy, 2015); "peer-to-peer economy" (Hamari et al, 2015); etc?…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…firms, organizations, markets, economies) can be understood as assemblages or actor-networks of heterogeneous actors held together by a multiplicity of relations and associations that temporarily stabilize them. DE/CE scholarship has recently applied these theories to studies of, for example, community-supported fishing initiatives (Snyder and St. Martin, 2015), community gardens (Hosking and Palomino-Schalscha, 2016), and the research process itself (Cameron et al, 2014).…”
Section: The Relational Turn In Diverse/community Economies Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%