CooperationWorks!
TypeCooperative
IndustryCooperative development
Founded1999
HeadquartersUnited States
Key people
Deb Trocha, Chair
Websitecooperationworks.coop

CooperationWorks! is a network of organizations promoting rural development through the formation of cooperatives in the United States. CooperationWorks! is organized as a cooperative of 21 member development centers. The co-op facilitates the coordination of cooperative development efforts and provides business expertise to its member organizations.

CooperationWorks! is partnered with the National Cooperative Business Association and the Cooperative Development Foundation.[1]

History

Legislation was signed into law in 1990 authorizing grants to establish a network of rural cooperative development centers throughout the United States. The development centers worked together on an informal basis for nine years. The Madison Principles, a set of standards for cooperative development, were developed in 1995 in Madison, Wisconsin.[2] In February 1999, representatives from nine cooperative development centers on the U.S. met in Denver to found CooperationWorks!

In September 2009, the USDA awarded $2.9 million in grants to 15 members of CooperationWorks! to create jobs and foster economic development in rural communities.[3]

Members

  • Arkansas Rural Enterprise Center
  • California Center for Cooperative Development
  • Common Enterprise Development Corporation
  • Cooperative Development Institute
  • Cooperative Development Services
  • Democracy Collaborative
  • Food Cooperative Initiative
  • Fund for Democratic Communities
  • Indiana Cooperative Development Center
  • Iowa Alliance for Cooperative Business Development
  • Kentucky Center for Agriculture and Rural Development
  • Keystone Development Center
  • Latino Economic Development Center
  • Mississippi Center for Cooperative Development
  • Montana Cooperative Development Center
  • North American Students of Cooperation
  • National Cooperative Development Association
  • National Network of Forest Practitioners
  • Nebraska Cooperative Development Center
  • North Dakota Rural Electric and Telecommunications Development Center
  • Northwest Cooperative Development Center
  • Ohio Cooperative Development Center
  • Rocky Mountain Farmers Union Cooperative and Economic Development Center
  • South Dakota Value Added Agriculture Development Center

References

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