Is community energy really non-existent in post-socialist Europe? Examining recent trends in 16 countries

Iñigo Capellán-Pérez
Nadia Johanisova
Jasminka Young
Conrad Kunze

Community energy (CE) initiatives are developing in many regions of the world through a great diversity of typologies. Europe has a leading role with thousands of ongoing projects of small and medium size, which are however unevenly distributed over the continent. The density of CE projects is highest in North-Western and parts of Central Europe; on the contrary, their spread in post-socialist European countries (PSECs) has been reported to be much more limited. However, the (under)development of CE in PSECs remains an understudied topic in the literature.

Precarious labour: Russia's other transition

Marianna Pavlovskaya

A major outcome of the post-socialist transition in Russian has been widespread and persistent poverty. For three decades now, the capitalist economy has consistently failed to provide stable employment forcing large populations of the post-Soviet poor, as well as the thin middle class, to secure livelihoods through various forms of precarious work involving short-term, insecure, low-paid, unregulated and often off-the books employment.

Eco-social enterprises: ethical business in a post-socialist context

Nadia Johanisova
Lucie Sovová
Eva Fraňková

This chapter focuses on alternative economies in a European post-socialist country, the Czech Republic, looking for transitions not towards, but beyond capitalism. After a brief historical excursion, the authors use the concept of eco-social enterprise and a five-dimensional, sliding-scale research framework to expand the EU social enterprise definition imported to post socialist-countries. The criteria include: 1. other-than-profit goals; 2. using profits to replenish nature and community; 3. democratic and localized governance and ownership; 4. rootedness in place and time; 5.

Growing the Beautiful Anthropocene: Ethics of Care in East European Food Gardens

Lucie Sovová
Petr Jehlička
Petr Daněk

This study contributes to research proposing the ethics of care framework as a way of imagining a food system that cares for Others. We expand this exploration to the everyday practice of home gardening and the related social relationships and material flows. This area complements current scholarship, which mostly focuses on food-related care as a form of activism driven by intentionality and knowledge about the effects of consumption choices.

Degrowth from the East – between quietness and contention. Collaborative learnings from the Zagreb Degrowth Conference

Lilian Pungas
Ondřej Kolínský
Thomas SJ Smith
Ottavia Cima
Eva Fraňková
Agnes Gagyi
Markus Sattler
Lucie Sovová

While degrowth as a plural and decolonial movement actively invites the Global South to be part of its transformative project, the current North-South dichotomy threatens to miss the variety of semi-peripheral contexts. Against this backdrop, we aim to contribute to dialogues on degrowth from the often-overlooked ‘East’ – specifically post-socialist Central and Eastern Europe (CEE). Instead of being viewed as a site for transformative examples and inspiration for degrowth-oriented socio-ecological transformation, CEE is often portrayed as ‘lagging behind’.

On Babushkas and Postcapitalism: Theorising Diverse Economies from the Global East

Lucie Sovová
Ottavia Cima
Petr Jehlička
Lilian Pungas
Markus Sattler
Thomas S.J. Smith
Anja Decker
Nadia Johanisova
Sunna Kovanen
Peter North

As transformative visions for more just and sustainable societies multiply around the globe, the Diverse and Community Economies approach presents one of the most influential strategies to advance postcapitalist visions. In this paper, we contribute to this project based on our research and activism in the Global East, intended here as Central and Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union.