HENRY GEORGE SCHOOL OF SOCIAL SCIENCE CALENDAR

< 2020 >
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  • Cooperative Individualism – The Elegant Recipe for a Just Society
    Session 13
    6:30 pm-8:30 pm
    2020.12.01
    149 East 38th Street, New York, NY 10016

    Cooperative Individualism – The Elegant Recipe for a Just Society

    Joins us in this course to learn about cooperative individualism, the simple but elegant recipe for a just society.

    This course examines the origins and history of cooperative individualism, a set of principles argued as essential to the creation of just societies. Unlike the old divide between Left and Right, Cooperative Individualism offers a “Third Way” that reconciles property rights and human rights.

    The instructor, Edward J. Dodson retired in 2005 after three decades of management and analyst responsibilities in the housing finance industry. For most of that time he has taught political economy and lectured on history at the Henry George School of Social Science and Temple University. He is the author of a three-volume work, “The Discovery of First Principles” and a contributing writer to several periodicals devoted to promotion of the system of political economy developed in the late 19th  century by Henry George. In 1997 he established the online education and research project, the School of Cooperative Individualism.

    Instructor: Edward J. Dodson
    Dates: Tuesdays: 11/10, 11/17, 11/24, 12/1, 12/8, 12/15, 1/5, 1/12

    Time: 6:30 PM – 8:30 PM

    9 sessions
    A zoom link will be provided via email before the start of the first session.

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  • SUSTAINABLE ENTREPRENEURSHIP COURSE
    Session 3
    6:30 pm-8:00 pm
    2020.12.03
    149 East 38th Street, New York, NY 10016

    ENTREPRENEURSHIP

    This course teaches the basics of entrepreneurship and will enable the learner to apply the tools in a real life setting through a combination of theoretical concepts and hands on training. Each session has two parts: one hour of theory and one hour of practice.

    Instructor: Mouna Mahouachi

    Consultant Mouna Mahouachi (1) will be teaching the Entrepreneurship course at Henry George. She is sharing her knowledge of entrepreneurship and innovation processes since 2014. Ms. Mahouachi started her career at Credit Suisse where she worked on digital transformation projects in both Zurich and New York. There, she practiced entrepreneurship and launched a corporate innovation program called the Creative Lab. She holds a Master’s degree from the Swiss Institute of Technology (EPFL) and has studied the Business Model Canvas at HEC Lausanne with its creator, Alexander Osterwalder. She is also an alumni of the Swiss CTI Entrepreneurship Course “Venture Challenge” and was mentored by Swiss entrepreneur and innovator Nadine Reichenthal. Mouna Mahouachi is now consulting on technology projects, including blockchain, Cloud and HPC and she is the author of an upcoming book about decentralized economies.

    TIME: 6:30PM – 8:00PM EST
    Dates: Thursdays: 11/12, 11/19, 12/3, 12/10, 12/17
    5 sessions
    A link to each class will be provide before the start via email.


    Topics

    • Elevator Pitch and Value Proposition | Form Project Teams
      • The Elevator Pitch
      • Value Proposition
      • Problem Statement
      • Customer Segment
      • Hands-on: Pitch Team Ventures, Form Project Teams
      • Handout: Principles of Pitching, Defining a value proposition, Defining my problem statement, Project Management Tools (Agile)
    • MVP and Value Proposition Canvas | Customer Validation
      • MVP and the Value Proposition Canvas
      • Customer Validation and Pivoting
      • Hands-on: Define teams’ MVP, Customer Validation
      • Handout: Value Proposition Canvas, Theory and tools of MVP and Customer Validation
    • Business Model Part I | Business Model Canvas
      • Business Model Part I (VP, Customer Segments, CR, Marketing Channels, Revenue)
      • Business Plan basics
      • Selected Topics: Design Thinking, Accounting, PR & Marketing: Social Media Marketing, Thought Leadership, PR & Communication
      • Hands-on: Work on ventures’ business model part I
      • Handout: Business Model Canvas, Business Plan Template
    • Business Model Part II | Business Model Canvas
      • Business Model Part II (Partners, Key resources, Key Activities, Costs)
      • Hands-on: Work on ventures’ business model part II | Practice Final Presentations
    • Course Summary | Final Presentations
      • Course summary
      • Final Presentations
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  • What is Modern Monetary Theory (MMT)?
    Session 5
    6:30 pm-8:30 pm
    2020.12.07
    149 East 38th Street, New York, NY 10016

    WHAT IS MODERN MONETARY THEORY (MMT)?

    MMT, what it is and how it works

    Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) is a heterodox school of macroeconomic thought that asks:

    * To what degree is your country monetarily sovereign?

    * How does that impact the economic policies your country is able to pursue?

    A monetarily sovereign nation is one which issues its own currency, does not peg the value of that currency to any other currency or to any precious metal, and whose government does not take on debt in any currency other than its own.

    The United States, Canada, Australia and the United Kingdom are all monetarily sovereign nations. Countries like France and Italy, which are part of the Eurozone are not. Neither are the countries in Africa which are former French colonies and which continue to use the CFA Franc.

    It turns out that whether a country is monetarily sovereign or not has

    tremendous importance in determining the economic policies a country can pursue in response to crises, whether those crises be economic, political, medical or ecological. Modern monetary theory explains, for example, why the U.S. federal government can create hundreds of billions of dollars to spend in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, while state and local governments (not to mention individual households) cannot.

    In this five-session, students will get a taste of macroeconomics — the study of the overall determination of output, employment and prices — from the MMT perspective. Upon taking this course students will be able to understand and participate in current economic policy discussions.


    Essential Reading

    Stephanie Kelton

    “The Deficit Myth: Modern Monetary Theory and the Birth of the People’s Economy”

    Public Affairs/Hachette Book Group. 2020.

    Richard Murphy

    “The Joy of Tax: How a fair tax system can create a better society”

    Corgi Books/Transworld Publishers. 2015.

    Yeva Nersisyan and L. Randall Wray

    “How to Pay for the Green New Deal”

    Levy Economics Institute of Bard College, Working Paper No. 931. 2019.

    http://www.levyinstitute.org/pubs/wp_931.pdf

    Pavlina R. Tcherneva

    “The Case for a Job Guarantee”

    Polity Press. 2020.

    L. Randall Wray

    “Modern Money Theory: A Primer on Macroeconomics for Sovereign Monetary Systems”

    Palgrave Macmillan. 2015 (second edition).


    Recommended Reading

    Christine Desan

    “Making Money: Coin, Currency, and the Coming of Capitalism”

    Oxford University Press. 2014.

    David Graeber

    “Debt: The First 5,000 Years”

    Melville House. 2014.

    John Maynard Keynes

    “How to Pay for the War”

    Macmillan. 1940.

    William Mitchell, L. Randall Wray and Martin Watts

    “Macroeconomics”

    Red Globe Press/Macmillan International. 2019.

    Warren Mosler

    “The 7 Deadly Innocent Frauds of Economic Policy”

    Valance Company. 2010.

    Warren Mosler

    “Soft Currency Economics II: What Everyone Thinks They Know About Monetary Policy Is Wrong”

    Valance Company. 2012.

    Fanny Pigeaud and Ndongo Samba Sylla

    “L’Arme Invisible de la Françafrique: Une Histoire du Franc CFA”

    La Decouverte. 2018. (In French)

    Robert Skidelsky

    “Money and Government: The Past and Future of Economics”

    Yale University Press. 2018.

    L. Randall Wray

    “Understanding Modern Money: The Key to Full Employment and Price Stability”

    Edward Elgar. 1998.


    Instructor: James Keenan
    Dates: Mondays | 11/9, 11/16, 11/23, 11/30, 12/7

    Time: 6:30 PM – 8:30 PM

    5 sessions
    A link to join the online course will be provided via email before the start of the first session.

8
  • Cooperative Individualism – The Elegant Recipe for a Just Society
    Session 14
    6:30 pm-8:30 pm
    2020.12.08
    149 East 38th Street, New York, NY 10016

    Cooperative Individualism – The Elegant Recipe for a Just Society

    Joins us in this course to learn about cooperative individualism, the simple but elegant recipe for a just society.

    This course examines the origins and history of cooperative individualism, a set of principles argued as essential to the creation of just societies. Unlike the old divide between Left and Right, Cooperative Individualism offers a “Third Way” that reconciles property rights and human rights.

    The instructor, Edward J. Dodson retired in 2005 after three decades of management and analyst responsibilities in the housing finance industry. For most of that time he has taught political economy and lectured on history at the Henry George School of Social Science and Temple University. He is the author of a three-volume work, “The Discovery of First Principles” and a contributing writer to several periodicals devoted to promotion of the system of political economy developed in the late 19th  century by Henry George. In 1997 he established the online education and research project, the School of Cooperative Individualism.

    Instructor: Edward J. Dodson
    Dates: Tuesdays: 11/10, 11/17, 11/24, 12/1, 12/8, 12/15, 1/5, 1/12

    Time: 6:30 PM – 8:30 PM

    9 sessions
    A zoom link will be provided via email before the start of the first session.

9
10
  • SUSTAINABLE ENTREPRENEURSHIP COURSE
    Session 4
    6:30 pm-8:00 pm
    2020.12.10
    149 East 38th Street, New York, NY 10016

    ENTREPRENEURSHIP

    This course teaches the basics of entrepreneurship and will enable the learner to apply the tools in a real life setting through a combination of theoretical concepts and hands on training. Each session has two parts: one hour of theory and one hour of practice.

    Instructor: Mouna Mahouachi

    Consultant Mouna Mahouachi (1) will be teaching the Entrepreneurship course at Henry George. She is sharing her knowledge of entrepreneurship and innovation processes since 2014. Ms. Mahouachi started her career at Credit Suisse where she worked on digital transformation projects in both Zurich and New York. There, she practiced entrepreneurship and launched a corporate innovation program called the Creative Lab. She holds a Master’s degree from the Swiss Institute of Technology (EPFL) and has studied the Business Model Canvas at HEC Lausanne with its creator, Alexander Osterwalder. She is also an alumni of the Swiss CTI Entrepreneurship Course “Venture Challenge” and was mentored by Swiss entrepreneur and innovator Nadine Reichenthal. Mouna Mahouachi is now consulting on technology projects, including blockchain, Cloud and HPC and she is the author of an upcoming book about decentralized economies.

    TIME: 6:30PM – 8:00PM EST
    Dates: Thursdays: 11/12, 11/19, 12/3, 12/10, 12/17
    5 sessions
    A link to each class will be provide before the start via email.


    Topics

    • Elevator Pitch and Value Proposition | Form Project Teams
      • The Elevator Pitch
      • Value Proposition
      • Problem Statement
      • Customer Segment
      • Hands-on: Pitch Team Ventures, Form Project Teams
      • Handout: Principles of Pitching, Defining a value proposition, Defining my problem statement, Project Management Tools (Agile)
    • MVP and Value Proposition Canvas | Customer Validation
      • MVP and the Value Proposition Canvas
      • Customer Validation and Pivoting
      • Hands-on: Define teams’ MVP, Customer Validation
      • Handout: Value Proposition Canvas, Theory and tools of MVP and Customer Validation
    • Business Model Part I | Business Model Canvas
      • Business Model Part I (VP, Customer Segments, CR, Marketing Channels, Revenue)
      • Business Plan basics
      • Selected Topics: Design Thinking, Accounting, PR & Marketing: Social Media Marketing, Thought Leadership, PR & Communication
      • Hands-on: Work on ventures’ business model part I
      • Handout: Business Model Canvas, Business Plan Template
    • Business Model Part II | Business Model Canvas
      • Business Model Part II (Partners, Key resources, Key Activities, Costs)
      • Hands-on: Work on ventures’ business model part II | Practice Final Presentations
    • Course Summary | Final Presentations
      • Course summary
      • Final Presentations
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15
  • Cooperative Individualism – The Elegant Recipe for a Just Society
    Session 15
    6:30 pm-8:30 pm
    2020.12.15
    149 East 38th Street, New York, NY 10016

    Cooperative Individualism – The Elegant Recipe for a Just Society

    Joins us in this course to learn about cooperative individualism, the simple but elegant recipe for a just society.

    This course examines the origins and history of cooperative individualism, a set of principles argued as essential to the creation of just societies. Unlike the old divide between Left and Right, Cooperative Individualism offers a “Third Way” that reconciles property rights and human rights.

    The instructor, Edward J. Dodson retired in 2005 after three decades of management and analyst responsibilities in the housing finance industry. For most of that time he has taught political economy and lectured on history at the Henry George School of Social Science and Temple University. He is the author of a three-volume work, “The Discovery of First Principles” and a contributing writer to several periodicals devoted to promotion of the system of political economy developed in the late 19th  century by Henry George. In 1997 he established the online education and research project, the School of Cooperative Individualism.

    Instructor: Edward J. Dodson
    Dates: Tuesdays: 11/10, 11/17, 11/24, 12/1, 12/8, 12/15, 1/5, 1/12

    Time: 6:30 PM – 8:30 PM

    9 sessions
    A zoom link will be provided via email before the start of the first session.

16
  • A Hard Look at Rent and Rent Seeking with Michael Hudson & Pepe Escobar
    Seminar
    9:00 am-10:30 am
    2020.12.16
    149 East 38th Street, New York, NY 10016

    A HARD LOOK AT RENT AND RENT SEEKING WITH MICHAEL HUDSON & PEPE ESCOBAR

    Join us for an interactive discussion on wealth inequality and the “Great Game” on the control of natural resources.
    In this webinar organized jointly by the Henry George School and the International Union for Land Value Taxation, Michael Hudson and Pepe Escobar will unpack one of the most destructive features of our economic system and the many different ways it drives wealth inequality.

    They will also focus on China – US relations and their understanding of the “Great Game” regarding control of the world’s resources.

    Date: Wednesday December 16th 2020

    Time: 9:00 am in New York 9:00 pm in Bangkok

    Michael Hudson is an American economist, Professor of Economics at the University of Missouri–Kansas City and a researcher at the Levy Economics Institute at Bard College, former Wall Street analyst, political consultant, commentator and journalist. … He identifies himself as a classical economist. Michael is the author of J is for Junk Economics (2017), Killing the Host (2015), The Bubble and Beyond (2012), Super-Imperialism: The Economic Strategy of American Empire (1968 & 2003), Trade, Development and Foreign Debt (1992 & 2009) and of The Myth of Aid (1971), amongst many others. His books have been translated into Japanese, Chinese, German, Spanish, and Russian

    Pepe Escobar, born in Brazil, is a correspondent/editor-at-large at Asia Times, and columnist for Consortium News (D.C.) and Strategic Culture (Moscow) . Since the mid-1980s he has lived and worked as a foreign correspondent in London, Paris, Milan, Los Angeles and Singapore/Bangkok. He has extensively covered Pakistan, Afghanistan, Central Asia, China, Iran, Iraq and the wider Middle East. Pepe is the author of Globalistan: How the Globalized World is Dissolving into Liquid War (2007); Red Zone Blues: a Snapshot of Baghdad during the Surge. He was contributing editor to The Empire and the Crescent (Amal Books, Bristol); Tutto in Vendita (Nuovi Mondi Media, Italy).His last two books are Empire of Chaos (2014) and 2030 (2015). Pepe is also associated with the Paris-based European Academy of Geopolitics. When not on the road, he lives between Sao Paulo, Paris and Bangkok.

     

    A link to join the online seminar will be provided via email before the start of the webinar.

    Code of Conduct

17
  • SUSTAINABLE ENTREPRENEURSHIP COURSE
    Session 5
    6:30 pm-8:00 pm
    2020.12.17
    149 East 38th Street, New York, NY 10016

    ENTREPRENEURSHIP

    This course teaches the basics of entrepreneurship and will enable the learner to apply the tools in a real life setting through a combination of theoretical concepts and hands on training. Each session has two parts: one hour of theory and one hour of practice.

    Instructor: Mouna Mahouachi

    Consultant Mouna Mahouachi (1) will be teaching the Entrepreneurship course at Henry George. She is sharing her knowledge of entrepreneurship and innovation processes since 2014. Ms. Mahouachi started her career at Credit Suisse where she worked on digital transformation projects in both Zurich and New York. There, she practiced entrepreneurship and launched a corporate innovation program called the Creative Lab. She holds a Master’s degree from the Swiss Institute of Technology (EPFL) and has studied the Business Model Canvas at HEC Lausanne with its creator, Alexander Osterwalder. She is also an alumni of the Swiss CTI Entrepreneurship Course “Venture Challenge” and was mentored by Swiss entrepreneur and innovator Nadine Reichenthal. Mouna Mahouachi is now consulting on technology projects, including blockchain, Cloud and HPC and she is the author of an upcoming book about decentralized economies.

    TIME: 6:30PM – 8:00PM EST
    Dates: Thursdays: 11/12, 11/19, 12/3, 12/10, 12/17
    5 sessions
    A link to each class will be provide before the start via email.


    Topics

    • Elevator Pitch and Value Proposition | Form Project Teams
      • The Elevator Pitch
      • Value Proposition
      • Problem Statement
      • Customer Segment
      • Hands-on: Pitch Team Ventures, Form Project Teams
      • Handout: Principles of Pitching, Defining a value proposition, Defining my problem statement, Project Management Tools (Agile)
    • MVP and Value Proposition Canvas | Customer Validation
      • MVP and the Value Proposition Canvas
      • Customer Validation and Pivoting
      • Hands-on: Define teams’ MVP, Customer Validation
      • Handout: Value Proposition Canvas, Theory and tools of MVP and Customer Validation
    • Business Model Part I | Business Model Canvas
      • Business Model Part I (VP, Customer Segments, CR, Marketing Channels, Revenue)
      • Business Plan basics
      • Selected Topics: Design Thinking, Accounting, PR & Marketing: Social Media Marketing, Thought Leadership, PR & Communication
      • Hands-on: Work on ventures’ business model part I
      • Handout: Business Model Canvas, Business Plan Template
    • Business Model Part II | Business Model Canvas
      • Business Model Part II (Partners, Key resources, Key Activities, Costs)
      • Hands-on: Work on ventures’ business model part II | Practice Final Presentations
    • Course Summary | Final Presentations
      • Course summary
      • Final Presentations
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21
  • When Workingmen Shook the World – the 1886 NYC Mayor’s Race
    Seminar
    6:30 pm-8:00 pm
    2020.12.21-2021.01.21
    149 East 38th Street, New York, NY 10016

    When Workingmen Shook the World – the 1886 NYC Mayor’s Race

    Mon, December 21, 2020 | 6:30 PM – 8:00 PM EST

    In this webinar, Dr. Marty Rowland will present an in-depth look at the 1886 NYC Mayor’s race which featured Henry George as the workingman’s candidate versus Congressman and social elite/politically connected Abram S. Hewitt.  Three levels of analysis will be explored:

    a) Institutional and 19th century corrupt practices of NYC politics that roadblocked the possibility of George’s win;

    b) How hopes of a NYS and National Labor Party were dashed in the 12 months following the 1886 election; and

    c) Lessons still relevant for advancing George’s Single Tax within today’s socially progressive movement.

    Dr. Rowland is a Henry George scholar and Trustee of the HGSSS, a licensed professional environmental engineer, natural resource economist in the tradition of George-Ostrom-Bromley-Raworth.

     

    A link to join the online seminar will be provided via email before the start of the webinar.

    Code of Conduct

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January
January
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