Paint Your Town Red How Preston Took Back Control and Your T Format: Paperback

$ 7.49

height: 0.6 in Genre: Political Science, Social Science, History Intended Audience: General/trade Publication Year: 2021 ISBN: 9781913462192 Item Weight: 6.3 Oz Book Title: Paint Your Town Red : How Preston Took Back Control and Your Town Can Too Author: Matthew Brown, Rhian Jones Language: English Item Length: 7.7 in Item Width: 5 in Format: Trade Paperback Type: book width: 5 in Narrative Type: book Number of Pages: 180 Pages Topic: Sociology / General, Public Policy / City Planning & Urban Development, Europe / Great Britain / General, Sociology / Urban Publisher: Watkins Media The Limited Item Height: 0.6 in

Description

Paint Your Town Red How Preston Took Back Control and Your T Format: Paperback. A lot of recent coverage and references have tended to oversimplify the Preston Model, which is not just about ‘buying local’ but a comprehensive project, which envisions local and regional discussions and collaboration adding up to a wholesale transformation of our currently failing economic systems. Paint Your Town Red tells the story of how one city in the north of England decided to level up without waiting for Whitehall.Across the world, there is a growing recognition that a new kind of economy is needed: more democratic, less exploitative, less destructive of society and the planet. Paint Your Town Red looks at how wealth can be generated and shared at a local level through the experience of one of the main advocates of the new Democratic Economy, Matthew Brown, the driving-force behind the world-recognized Preston Model.Using analysis, interviews and case studies to explain what Matthew and Preston City Council have done over the last decade in order to earn Preston the title of Most Improved City, the book shows how the model can be adapted to fit different local circumstances, as well as demonstrating how Preston itself adapted economic and democratic experiments in ‘community wealth-building’ from elsewhere in the US and Europe.Preston’s success shows that the ideas of community wealth-building work in practice and have the capacity to achieve a meaningful transfer of wealth and power back to local communities. A lot of recent coverage and references have tended to oversimplify the Preston Model, which is not just about ‘buying local’ but a comprehensive project, which envisions local and regional discussions and collaboration adding up to a wholesale transformation of our currently failing economic systems.