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CECOSESOLA (Central de las cooperativas de Lara, Cooperatives of Social Services of Lara State) is a hierarchy-free, solidary association of the cooperatives in Venezuela.

History

The umbrella organization of cooperatives for social services in the state of Lara was founded in late 1967. The first project of CECOSESOLA was a funeral home. It is now the largest in the region. The institute operates its own coffin production.

About fifty-based organizations with a total of 20,000 members (employees and users) are connected to the network. 1,200 Cooperative fashionistas work as "full-time" (trabajadores asociados) at CECOSESOLA. They get their livelihood directly from the total composite.[1] They are paid a weekly amount in the form of a wage labor "advance" (anticipo). The payment is about twice the government-set minimum wage. This advance is based on people's requirements, so it is not the same for everyone. Those with children, for example, get more. In 2010, the turnover of the company amounted to 430 million Bolivares - around 100 million U.S. dollars.

In September 2022, Cecosesola was named a joint winner of the Right Livelihood Award, the "Alternative Nobel Prize",[2] “For establishing an equitable and cooperative economic model as a solid alternative to profit-based economies.”

Projects

In the six projects of 190,000 health care treatments are performed per year. In 2009, the newly built health center was inaugurated in CICS. Here, alternative treatments such as acupuncture and massages are offered, but also surgical procedures and laboratory and X-ray examinations. The prices are 60 percent below those of private hospitals. For members of the cooperatives certain treatments are free.

The cooperative also includes farms: Twelve organizations in the states of Lara and Trujillo with over 200 small farms (2-3 hectares) supply the markets. In some, companies will try to replace agrochemicals with biological crop protection. Small production cooperatives produce foods that are sold in the markets - bread, whole grain pasta, cereals, tomato sauce, herbs, spices, honey, fruit pulp etc. There is also a credit union and other financing and a Solidarity Fund.

References

This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page. Please help improve this article by introducing citations to additional sources.Find sources: "Cecosesola" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (July 2013)
  1. ^ "CECOSESOLA - On the Way", published by Die Buchmacherei, Berlin 2012 - Preface pp. 10/11
  2. ^ Recibimos el premio nobel alternativo 2022 – Cecosesola
  3. ^ a b c d e f "Patterns of Commoning | The Commons Strategies Group". Retrieved 2023-07-06.