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  2. Cooperative Marketing Act - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cooperative_Marketing_Act

    The Cooperative Marketing Act of 1926 44 Stat. 802 (1926) was a piece of agricultural legislation passed in the United States which expanded upon the Capper–Volstead Act of 1922. [1] It allowed farmers to exchange “past, present, and prospective crop, market, statistical, economic, and other similar information” at their local cooperative ...

  3. Rural Cooperatives - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rural_Cooperatives

    Rural Cooperatives magazine helped to increase understanding and use of the cooperative, producer- and user-owned form of business. USDA's oldest periodical, it was launched after Congress passed the Cooperative Marketing Act, which charges USDA with helping to promote cooperatives through education, research, statistics, technical assistance ...

  4. Capper–Volstead Act - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capper–Volstead_Act

    Capper–Volstead Act (P.L. 67-146), the Co-operative Marketing Associations Act (7 U.S.C. 291, 292) was adopted by the United States Congress on February 18, 1922. It gave “associations” of persons producing agricultural products certain exemptions from antitrust laws. It is sometimes called the Magna Carta of cooperatives. [1]

  5. Co-operative studies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Co-operative_studies

    Subfields of this include Co-operative economics, and the History of the cooperative movement. In December 2011 a special edition of the Journal of Co-operative Studies was given over to the subject of co-operative learning. Edited by Maureen Breeze, the edition contains 14 articles written by theorists and practitioners of co-operative learning.

  6. Retailers' cooperative - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Retailers'_cooperative

    Retailers' cooperatives also engage in group advertising and promotion, uniform stock merchandising, and private branding. [2] This increases consumer recognition of brands and is beneficial for the stores under a franchise. The aim of the cooperative is to improve buying conditions for its members, which are retail businesses in this case.

  7. Co-marketing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Co-marketing

    Co-marketing (Commensal marketing, symbiotic marketing) is a form of marketing co-operation, in which two or more businesses work together. "Co-marketing" began in 1981 when Koichi Shimizu, a professor at Josai University, published an article in a bulletin published by Nikkei Advertising Research Institute in Japan.

  8. Rochdale Principles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rochdale_Principles

    The second of the Rochdale Principles states that co-operative societies must have democratic member control. According to the ICA's Statement on the Co-operative Identity, "Co-operatives are democratic organizations controlled by their members, who actively participate in setting their policies and making decisions.

  9. Co-operative economics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Co-operative_economics

    In some co-operative economics literature, the aim is the achievement of a co-operative commonwealth, a society based on cooperative and socialist principles. Co-operative economists – federalist, individualist, and otherwise – have presented the extension of their economic model to its natural limits as a goal.