Chicago, Illinois, July 14, 2017 -- Renee Hatcher, Director of the Business Enterprise Law Clinic at The John Marshall Law School in Chicago, recently traveled to Havana, Cuba to speak to a cooperative development delegation on the history of community economic development. She also attended the 29th Conference of North American and Cuban Philosophers and Social Scientists, where she presented her paper, “People over Profit: Towards a Solidarity Economy Approach to Community Economic Development.” Both events were sponsored by the Center for Global Justice and hosted by the Institute of Philosophy-Cuba.
|
|||
Attendees at these events, including co-op members, writers and advocates from the U.S. and abroad, investigated the new and emerging cooperatives in Cuba as a key feature of the nation’s economic reforms. The delegation heard from Cuban scholars and members of Cuban cooperatives, including face-to-face meetings with co-op members and opportunities to exchange experiences and ideas. The trip also featured an exchange with leading Cuban thinkers discussing the reinvention of socialism and opportunities for expanded exchanges with the people of the U.S., particularly in the cooperative sector.
In Cuba, there are hundreds of new urban co-ops, which further expand the emerging non-state sector of the economy in addition to small, private businesses. Co-ops offer a socialist alternative to state employment for workers who find that the cooperative form of management not only offers them democratic participation in running their collective business but also higher incomes—typically three times higher and as much as seven times higher than in state jobs. Many of these co-ops were converted from state enterprises that now lease the building and other means of production from the state, but manage it as their own.
Hatcher joined The John Marshall Law School last year after finishing a clinical teaching faculty fellowship at the University of Baltimore School of Law. Hatcher has focused her career on public interest and social justice, creating social change through community development and human rights advocacy work.
Hatcher previously was a post-doctoral fellow at the Institute for Urban Policy Research and Analysis at the University of Texas-Austin, a staff attorney at the Chicago Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under the Law and the inaugural Helaine Barnett Fellow at the Legal Services Corporation in Washington, DC.
A native of Gary, Indiana, Hatcher graduated from New York University School of Law in 2011.
About John Marshall’s Business Enterprise Law Clinic
The Business Enterprise Law Clinic at The John Marshall Law School provides pro bono business and transactional legal services to individuals, small businesses and non-profits with limited financial resources from underserved communities. Under the supervision of the BELAW director and experienced business and transactional attorneys serving as faculty supervisors, a select group of third-year John Marshall law students perform all legal work pro bono. Although legal services are provided pro bono, clients are responsible for payment of filing fees and out-of-pocket expenses.
Attachments:
A photo accompanying this announcement is available at http://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/2b6a2dfd-f453-4d62-ab70-590ce9b443da
Miller McDonald The John Marshall Law School 312-427-2737 [email protected]


Texas App Store Age Verification Law Blocked by Federal Judge in First Amendment Ruling
Sanofi to Acquire Dynavax in $2.2 Billion Deal to Strengthen Vaccines Portfolio
GLP-1 Weight Loss Pills Set to Reshape Food and Fast-Food Industry in 2025
TSMC Honors Japanese Chip Equipment Makers With 2025 Supplier Awards
Saks Global Weighs Chapter 11 Bankruptcy Amid Debt Pressures and Luxury Retail Slowdown
BlackRock-Backed Global Ports Deal Faces Uncertainty Amid Cosco Demands
Warner Bros Discovery Weighs Amended Paramount Skydance Bid as Netflix Takeover Battle Intensifies
Nvidia and Groq Strike Strategic AI Inference Licensing Deal
California DMV Proposes New Safety Rules for Autonomous Vehicles After Waymo Incidents
South Korean Court Clears Korea Zinc’s $7.4 Billion U.S. Smelter Project, Shares Surge
Novo Nordisk Stock Surges After FDA Approves Wegovy Pill for Weight Loss
Brazilian Oil Workers’ Strike Continues as Key Petrobras Union Rejects Proposal
California Regulator Probes Waymo Robotaxi Stalls During San Francisco Power Outage
Sanofi to Acquire Dynavax in $2.2 Billion Deal to Strengthen Vaccine Portfolio
FTC Praises Instacart for Ending AI Pricing Tests After $60M Settlement
DOJ Reaches Settlement With Blackstone’s LivCor Over Alleged Rent Price-Fixing
Hyundai Recalls Over 51,000 Vehicles in the U.S. Due to Fire Risk From Trailer Wiring Issue 



