Timebanking in New Zealand as a prefigurative strategy within a wider degrowth movement

Abstract A movement is gaining traction in New Zealand around timebanks, networks of support in which members exchange favors such as gardening, lifts to the supermarket, pet care, language lessons, career advice, or smartphone tutorials. An online currency is used to track these exchanges, with one...

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Main Author: Emma McGuirk
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Arizona Libraries 2017-09-01
Series:Journal of Political Ecology
Online Access:https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/20897
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spelling doaj-282af8f38e974dc3996ee688fe75b5f52020-11-24T21:25:15ZengUniversity of Arizona LibrariesJournal of Political Ecology1073-04512017-09-0124159560910.2458/v24i1.2089720332Timebanking in New Zealand as a prefigurative strategy within a wider degrowth movementEmma McGuirk0University of Otago, New ZealandAbstract A movement is gaining traction in New Zealand around timebanks, networks of support in which members exchange favors such as gardening, lifts to the supermarket, pet care, language lessons, career advice, or smartphone tutorials. An online currency is used to track these exchanges, with one hour of work earning one time credit. While each transaction may seem commonplace, when timebanks flourish they work to reshape motivations and opportunities for engaging in labor, and relocalize networks of solidarity, friendship, and resources. Participants reported examples of developing unexpected friendships and renewed enthusiasm for a larger collective project of building alternatives to the currently dominant growth-addicted economic model. These processes contribute to the establishment of foundational, mostly small-scale networks that are enjoyable to use in the here and now, while also creating the potential for these systems to be scaled up or linked together in response to greater economic, ecological, and social changes. Timebank developers in New Zealand are negotiating several structural challenges in their attempts to bring these networks to fruition. This article shares results of ethnographic research amongst seven North Island timebanks, and offers suggestions for future research in this area. Keywords: timebank, community currency, activism, degrowth, New Zealandhttps://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/20897
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Emma McGuirk
spellingShingle Emma McGuirk
Timebanking in New Zealand as a prefigurative strategy within a wider degrowth movement
Journal of Political Ecology
author_facet Emma McGuirk
author_sort Emma McGuirk
title Timebanking in New Zealand as a prefigurative strategy within a wider degrowth movement
title_short Timebanking in New Zealand as a prefigurative strategy within a wider degrowth movement
title_full Timebanking in New Zealand as a prefigurative strategy within a wider degrowth movement
title_fullStr Timebanking in New Zealand as a prefigurative strategy within a wider degrowth movement
title_full_unstemmed Timebanking in New Zealand as a prefigurative strategy within a wider degrowth movement
title_sort timebanking in new zealand as a prefigurative strategy within a wider degrowth movement
publisher University of Arizona Libraries
series Journal of Political Ecology
issn 1073-0451
publishDate 2017-09-01
description Abstract A movement is gaining traction in New Zealand around timebanks, networks of support in which members exchange favors such as gardening, lifts to the supermarket, pet care, language lessons, career advice, or smartphone tutorials. An online currency is used to track these exchanges, with one hour of work earning one time credit. While each transaction may seem commonplace, when timebanks flourish they work to reshape motivations and opportunities for engaging in labor, and relocalize networks of solidarity, friendship, and resources. Participants reported examples of developing unexpected friendships and renewed enthusiasm for a larger collective project of building alternatives to the currently dominant growth-addicted economic model. These processes contribute to the establishment of foundational, mostly small-scale networks that are enjoyable to use in the here and now, while also creating the potential for these systems to be scaled up or linked together in response to greater economic, ecological, and social changes. Timebank developers in New Zealand are negotiating several structural challenges in their attempts to bring these networks to fruition. This article shares results of ethnographic research amongst seven North Island timebanks, and offers suggestions for future research in this area. Keywords: timebank, community currency, activism, degrowth, New Zealand
url https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/20897
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