Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Beloved Economy Practices

Organizing economic relationships around generosity, mutual aid, and care rather than extraction and competition.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Rabia rejected worldly possessions in favor of spiritual wealth, modeling economics of enough. In contemporary organizing, beloved economy practices mean establishing alternative economic relationships within and between organizations. This includes gift economies within organizations, transparent resource-sharing, and collective decision-making about money. It means rejecting scarcity narratives that pit community members against each other and instead practicing abundance through sharing. Beloved economy also includes challenging how organizing work is valued—recognizing that frontline people are experts deserving compensation, while rejecting capitalist hierarchies of worth. This might mean participatory budgeting where members decide resource allocation, or pooling resources for collective benefit. These practices are both ethical and strategic; communities that practice economic generosity internally develop trust necessary for collective action. Beloved economy practices also model alternatives to capitalist logic, demonstrating to members that different economic relationships are possible and preferable.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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