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Economic Democracy Weekly

Today’s Economic Democracy Weekly highlights efforts to meet the economic demands of our times. We begin with a story about the journalism that communities need—and how to expand it. Next, in the third installment in our series, The Vision for Black Lives: An Economic Policy Agenda, a Chicago nonprofit leader calls for reparations to fix the damage from a half-century long “war on drugs.” Then, how to speed up employee ownership growth before millions of small businesses shut down due to owner retirement. Lastly, an update on student debt—and how millions of nonprofit borrowers may be missing out on loan forgiveness. 

A Free Press Needs a New Kind of Journalism

“Whether you know exactly who owns what you see, hear, and read, you should know that media has an ownership problem.” Read more...

 
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Why Reparations Can Counter the Legacy of a 50-Year “War on Drugs”

“Even if … mass incarceration became a thing of the past, the damage done over the past 50-plus years will not be easily remedied. Reparations are required.” Read more...

 
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Can Employee Ownership Meet Its “Silver Tsunami” Moment?

The retirement of baby boomer business owners provides a wave of opportunities for millions of employees to buy out businesses. Here’s one tool to do that. Read more...

 

Student Debt Update: More Relief Announced, but Millions Remain Left Out

“Millions of Americans, including many working in the nonprofit sector, are likely eligible for forgiveness but have not…applied for relief.” Read more...

 
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