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  2. Mutual aid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mutual_aid

    Mutual aid is an organizational model where voluntary, collaborative exchanges of resources and services for common benefit take place amongst community members to overcome social, economic, and political barriers to meeting common needs. This can include physical resources like food, clothing, or medicine, as well as services like breakfast ...

  3. Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mutual_Aid:_A_Factor_of...

    Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution is a 1902 collection of anthropological essays by Russian naturalist and anarchist philosopher Peter Kropotkin.The essays, initially published in the English periodical The Nineteenth Century between 1890 and 1896, [1] explore the role of mutually beneficial cooperation and reciprocity (or "mutual aid") in the animal kingdom and human societies both past and ...

  4. Benefit society - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benefit_society

    Peter Kropotkin posited early in the 20th century that mutual aid affiliations predate human culture and are as much a factor in evolution as is the "survival of the fittest" concept. Oaths, secret signs and knowledge, and regalia were historically an important part of many benefit societies but declined in use in most benefit societies during ...

  5. Mutual aid: Responding to the mental health needs of first ...

    www.aol.com/mutual-aid-responding-mental-health...

    Apr. 23—LIMA — It is often one of the most stressful situations one can face, whether it is dealing with a sudden death, being the victim of a crime or losing everything in a fire or other ...

  6. Social work with groups - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_work_with_groups

    The rationale for cultivating mutual aid in the group encounter is premised on mutual aid's resonance with humanistic values and the following propositions: 1) members have strengths, opinions, perspectives, information, and experiences that can be drawn upon to help others in the group; 2) helping others helps the helper, a concept known as ...

  7. Solidarity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solidarity

    The number and importance of mutual-aid institutions which were developed by the creative genius of the savage and half-savage masses, during the earliest clan-period of mankind and still more during the next village-community period, and the immense influence which these early institutions have exercised upon the subsequent development of ...

  8. What Would a Mutual Aid DAO Look Like?

    www.aol.com/news/mutual-aid-dao-look-210351003.html

    Pact, a mutual aid subscription service, has already raised $15,000 in ETH for NYC-based community organizing.

  9. Mutualism (economic theory) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mutualism_(economic_theory)

    The primary aspects of mutualism are free association, free banking, reciprocity in the form of mutual aid, workplace democracy, workers' self-management, gradualism and dual power. Mutualism is often described by its proponents as advocating an anti-capitalist free market .