HENRY GEORGE SCHOOL OF SOCIAL SCIENCE CALENDAR

< 2025 >
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  • From an Aristocratic to a Democratic Worldview: The Potential Transformation of Environmental Economics by Georgism
    Session 6
    6:30 pm-8:00 pm
    2025.04.07
    149 East 38th Street, New York, NY 10016

    From an Aristocratic to a Democratic Worldview: The Potential Transformation of Environmental Economics by Georgism

    The environmental perspective arose in Europe out of an aristocratic background, and it continues to be swayed by that history. From Thomas Malthus, economics inherited a very strong sense of the scarcity of nature. Since common lands in England were under the control of aristocrats, they considered it their mission to preserve nature for the enjoyment of future generations of aristocratic families. Almost every nature program on television promotes this worldview of pristine nature being damaged by the activities of common people and being preserved by the nobility. The story of Robin Hood emerged as a counter-narrative, but the economics profession turned it into a morality lesson that celebrates the sheriff of Nottingham.

    This 10-session course will examine how the aristocratic perspective persists as the shadow side of environmental economics in its treatment of common property, the valuation of natural goods, the treatment of people as costs or sources of destruction, an urban bias that denigrates rural life, an indifference to both equity and efficiency, and the critique of economic growth. The course will also analyze how Georgism can serve as the antidote by democratizing claims to nature. The course will further highlight the work of early thinkers like Aldo Leopold and their perception of nature as something of intrinsic value that transcends human ambitions.

    The instructor, Clifford Cobb is the thematic editor of the American Journal of Economics and Sociology. He is best known as the developer of the Genuine Progress Indicator, published by the San Francisco organization, Redefining Progress.

    Dates: Mondays – 3/03, 3/10, 3/17, 3/24, 3/31, 4/07, 4/14, 4/28, 5/12, 5/19

    Time: 6:30 PM – 8:00 PM ET

    Location: Online via Zoom

    Note: This is an online event. After registration, the Zoom link, along with the Meeting ID and Passcode, will be provided via email the day of each session.

    REGISTER NOW

8
  • Economy 2.0 – A Conversation with Teun van Sambeek
    Webinar
    1:00 pm-3:00 pm
    2025.04.08
    149 East 38th Street, New York, NY 10016

    Economy 2.0 – A Conversation with Teun van Sambeek


    Josh Sidman sits down for a conversation with Teun van Sambeek. Join them live via Zoom and be part of the discussion!

    Teun van Sambeek is a former IT professional and computer programmer who now focuses on economics and monetary systems. After founding multiple companies, in 2011 he moved to Africa and turned his attention to developing affordable housing. His experiences in Africa led him to arrive at some of the same conclusions as Silvio Gesell, although at the time he was not aware of Gesell’s existence. He is the founder of the 1coinH system, which is an alternative monetary model that incorporates demurrage and Universal Basic Income.

    Date: Tuesday, April 8, 2025

    Time: 1:00 PM – 3:00 PM ET

    Note: This is an online event. After registration, the Zoom link, along with the Meeting ID and Passcode, will be provided via email the day of the session.

9
  • Chokepoint Capitalism
    Session 1
    6:30 pm-7:30 pm
    2025.04.09
    149 East 38th Street, New York, NY 10016

    Chokepoint Capitalism

    The classic idea of a healthy and thriving market economy is that within each market there are buyers and sellers that can all buy and sell things from whomever they want. Capitalism, we are taught, is all about competition, freedom and choice where firms act normally as price takers, not price setters. In many markets, however, the reality today is different. Powerful corporations are leveraging technology to systematically create chokepoints by locking in buyers and sellers, stifling competition, and eventually using their market dominance to squeeze out more than a fair share of value. Using the work of Rebecca Giblin and Cory Doctorow as reference, Dr. Marty Rowland introduces us to the latest heresy of capitalism and discusses solutions inspired by Georgism.

    InstructorDr. Marty Rowland

    Dates: Wednesdays – 4/09, 4/16, 4/23, 4/30, 5/07, 5/14, 5/21

    Time: 6:30 PM – 7:30 PM ET

    Location: Online via Zoom

    Note: This is an online event. After registration, the Zoom link, along with the Meeting ID and Passcode, will be provided via email the day of each session.

    REGISTER NOW

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  • From an Aristocratic to a Democratic Worldview: The Potential Transformation of Environmental Economics by Georgism
    Session 7
    6:30 pm-8:00 pm
    2025.04.14
    149 East 38th Street, New York, NY 10016

    From an Aristocratic to a Democratic Worldview: The Potential Transformation of Environmental Economics by Georgism

    The environmental perspective arose in Europe out of an aristocratic background, and it continues to be swayed by that history. From Thomas Malthus, economics inherited a very strong sense of the scarcity of nature. Since common lands in England were under the control of aristocrats, they considered it their mission to preserve nature for the enjoyment of future generations of aristocratic families. Almost every nature program on television promotes this worldview of pristine nature being damaged by the activities of common people and being preserved by the nobility. The story of Robin Hood emerged as a counter-narrative, but the economics profession turned it into a morality lesson that celebrates the sheriff of Nottingham.

    This 10-session course will examine how the aristocratic perspective persists as the shadow side of environmental economics in its treatment of common property, the valuation of natural goods, the treatment of people as costs or sources of destruction, an urban bias that denigrates rural life, an indifference to both equity and efficiency, and the critique of economic growth. The course will also analyze how Georgism can serve as the antidote by democratizing claims to nature. The course will further highlight the work of early thinkers like Aldo Leopold and their perception of nature as something of intrinsic value that transcends human ambitions.

    The instructor, Clifford Cobb is the thematic editor of the American Journal of Economics and Sociology. He is best known as the developer of the Genuine Progress Indicator, published by the San Francisco organization, Redefining Progress.

    Dates: Mondays – 3/03, 3/10, 3/17, 3/24, 3/31, 4/07, 4/14, 4/28, 5/12, 5/19

    Time: 6:30 PM – 8:00 PM ET

    Location: Online via Zoom

    Note: This is an online event. After registration, the Zoom link, along with the Meeting ID and Passcode, will be provided via email the day of each session.

    REGISTER NOW

15
  • The Georgist Roots of the Community Land Trust Model
    Webinar
    1:30 pm-2:30 pm
    2025.04.15
    149 East 38th Street, New York, NY 10016

    The Georgist Roots of the Community Land Trust Model


    In this webinar, we will explore the historical and philosophical roots of the Community Land Trust (CLT) model, tracing its lineage to the ideas of Henry George. We will also examine how Georgist principles of land ownership and value distribution have influenced the development of CLTs and discuss their implications for contemporary housing policies.The speaker, Oriane Roty is a PhD candidate at the ICD Department, University of Tours, France. She is part of the Trust Issues Project, funded by the French Research Agency, which brings together an interdisciplinary team of researchers to study Community Land Trusts (CLTs) and their adaptation in French law. With a background in philosophy and law from the University Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, her research focuses on the origins and evolution of CLTs as a response to the housing crisis.

    The speaker, Oriane Roty is a PhD candidate in the ICD Department at the University of Tours, France. She is part of the Trust Issues Project, funded by the French Research Agency, which brings together an interdisciplinary team of researchers to study Community Land Trusts (CLTs) and their adaptation in French law. With a background in philosophy and law from the University Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, her research focuses on the origins and evolution of these legal frameworks as a response to the housing crisis, analyzing them as products of their social, historical, and legal contexts.

    Date: Tuesday, April 15, 2025

    Time: 1:30 PM – 2:30 PM ET

    Note: This is an online event. After registration, the Zoom link, along with the Meeting ID and Passcode, will be provided via email the day of the session.

16
  • Chokepoint Capitalism
    Session 2
    6:30 pm-7:30 pm
    2025.04.16
    149 East 38th Street, New York, NY 10016

    Chokepoint Capitalism

    The classic idea of a healthy and thriving market economy is that within each market there are buyers and sellers that can all buy and sell things from whomever they want. Capitalism, we are taught, is all about competition, freedom and choice where firms act normally as price takers, not price setters. In many markets, however, the reality today is different. Powerful corporations are leveraging technology to systematically create chokepoints by locking in buyers and sellers, stifling competition, and eventually using their market dominance to squeeze out more than a fair share of value. Using the work of Rebecca Giblin and Cory Doctorow as reference, Dr. Marty Rowland introduces us to the latest heresy of capitalism and discusses solutions inspired by Georgism.

    InstructorDr. Marty Rowland

    Dates: Wednesdays – 4/09, 4/16, 4/23, 4/30, 5/07, 5/14, 5/21

    Time: 6:30 PM – 7:30 PM ET

    Location: Online via Zoom

    Note: This is an online event. After registration, the Zoom link, along with the Meeting ID and Passcode, will be provided via email the day of each session.

    REGISTER NOW

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  • Economy 2.0 – A Conversation with Michael Linton
    Webinar
    1:00 pm-3:00 pm
    2025.04.22
    149 East 38th Street, New York, NY 10016

    Economy 2.0 – A Conversation with Michael Linton


    Josh Sidman sits down for a conversation with Michael Linton. Join them live via Zoom and be part of the discussion!

    Michael Linton is a pioneer in alternative exchange systems, having created the first LETS (Local Exchange Trading System) in the 1980s in Comox Valley, British Columbia. Ever since then, he has focused on system design for community economics, having started other systems in British Columbia and in other places around the world. He is also trained in Alexander Technique and lists Fritz Perls, Carl Rogers, R..D. Laing, F.M. Alexander, Patrick Macdonald, Stafford Beer, E.F. Schumacher, Henry George, George Spencer Brown, and Ursula Le Guin among his most important influences.

    Date: Tuesday, April 22, 2025

    Time: 1:00 PM – 3:00 PM ET

    Note: This is an online event. After registration, the Zoom link, along with the Meeting ID and Passcode, will be provided via email the day of the session.

23
  • Chokepoint Capitalism
    Session 3
    6:30 pm-7:30 pm
    2025.04.23
    149 East 38th Street, New York, NY 10016

    Chokepoint Capitalism

    The classic idea of a healthy and thriving market economy is that within each market there are buyers and sellers that can all buy and sell things from whomever they want. Capitalism, we are taught, is all about competition, freedom and choice where firms act normally as price takers, not price setters. In many markets, however, the reality today is different. Powerful corporations are leveraging technology to systematically create chokepoints by locking in buyers and sellers, stifling competition, and eventually using their market dominance to squeeze out more than a fair share of value. Using the work of Rebecca Giblin and Cory Doctorow as reference, Dr. Marty Rowland introduces us to the latest heresy of capitalism and discusses solutions inspired by Georgism.

    InstructorDr. Marty Rowland

    Dates: Wednesdays – 4/09, 4/16, 4/23, 4/30, 5/07, 5/14, 5/21

    Time: 6:30 PM – 7:30 PM ET

    Location: Online via Zoom

    Note: This is an online event. After registration, the Zoom link, along with the Meeting ID and Passcode, will be provided via email the day of each session.

    REGISTER NOW

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  • From an Aristocratic to a Democratic Worldview: The Potential Transformation of Environmental Economics by Georgism
    Session 8
    6:30 pm-8:00 pm
    2025.04.28
    149 East 38th Street, New York, NY 10016

    From an Aristocratic to a Democratic Worldview: The Potential Transformation of Environmental Economics by Georgism

    The environmental perspective arose in Europe out of an aristocratic background, and it continues to be swayed by that history. From Thomas Malthus, economics inherited a very strong sense of the scarcity of nature. Since common lands in England were under the control of aristocrats, they considered it their mission to preserve nature for the enjoyment of future generations of aristocratic families. Almost every nature program on television promotes this worldview of pristine nature being damaged by the activities of common people and being preserved by the nobility. The story of Robin Hood emerged as a counter-narrative, but the economics profession turned it into a morality lesson that celebrates the sheriff of Nottingham.

    This 10-session course will examine how the aristocratic perspective persists as the shadow side of environmental economics in its treatment of common property, the valuation of natural goods, the treatment of people as costs or sources of destruction, an urban bias that denigrates rural life, an indifference to both equity and efficiency, and the critique of economic growth. The course will also analyze how Georgism can serve as the antidote by democratizing claims to nature. The course will further highlight the work of early thinkers like Aldo Leopold and their perception of nature as something of intrinsic value that transcends human ambitions.

    The instructor, Clifford Cobb is the thematic editor of the American Journal of Economics and Sociology. He is best known as the developer of the Genuine Progress Indicator, published by the San Francisco organization, Redefining Progress.

    Dates: Mondays – 3/03, 3/10, 3/17, 3/24, 3/31, 4/07, 4/14, 4/28, 5/12, 5/19

    Time: 6:30 PM – 8:00 PM ET

    Location: Online via Zoom

    Note: This is an online event. After registration, the Zoom link, along with the Meeting ID and Passcode, will be provided via email the day of each session.

    REGISTER NOW

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  • Chokepoint Capitalism
    Session 4
    6:30 pm-7:30 pm
    2025.04.30
    149 East 38th Street, New York, NY 10016

    Chokepoint Capitalism

    The classic idea of a healthy and thriving market economy is that within each market there are buyers and sellers that can all buy and sell things from whomever they want. Capitalism, we are taught, is all about competition, freedom and choice where firms act normally as price takers, not price setters. In many markets, however, the reality today is different. Powerful corporations are leveraging technology to systematically create chokepoints by locking in buyers and sellers, stifling competition, and eventually using their market dominance to squeeze out more than a fair share of value. Using the work of Rebecca Giblin and Cory Doctorow as reference, Dr. Marty Rowland introduces us to the latest heresy of capitalism and discusses solutions inspired by Georgism.

    InstructorDr. Marty Rowland

    Dates: Wednesdays – 4/09, 4/16, 4/23, 4/30, 5/07, 5/14, 5/21

    Time: 6:30 PM – 7:30 PM ET

    Location: Online via Zoom

    Note: This is an online event. After registration, the Zoom link, along with the Meeting ID and Passcode, will be provided via email the day of each session.

    REGISTER NOW

May
May
May
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