A practice of organizing labor and resources as gifts circulating within community rather than as transactions, creating mutual obligation and care.
Rabia gave away all possessions and lived in radical simplicity, yet was never in want because community members gave to her out of love. This mirrors gift economy principles where labor and resources flow based on need and capacity rather than market logic. In community organizing, reciprocal gift economy means recognizing that while some organizing labor is unpaid, it creates obligation and reciprocal care. When someone volunteers their time, the community recognizes this gift and reciprocates through support and care. This differs from exploitation where volunteer labor is extracted without reciprocation. Organizing based on gift economy also means sharing resources openly—skills, knowledge, money, connections—without keeping accounts. It strengthens bonds because people feel genuinely supported, not just instrumentally useful. This practice is particularly powerful in communities with histories of being exploited for their labor. By organizing gift exchange rather than wage labor or volunteerism, communities create alternatives to capitalist extraction and rebuild cultures of mutual aid and reciprocity.
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