I have been curious about Cooperation Jackson, a grassroots effort at solidarity economy for Jackson, Mississippi, for a long time. I have activist colleagues in Cooperation Humboldt in Northern California, which is modeled on the Jackson effort. So when I saw this book on a table at an event, I suggested it to my economic justice bookgroup, and we picked it up.
We decided to focus on the last four sections of the book, so I really only skimmed the first four sections, which are basically the history of Cooperation Jackson and the philosophy behind it. As I had previously understood, this is a very radical program, focused basically on Black self-determination in a very Black university town (the state capital) with historically White governance and, of course, in a very White-run state. In the 2013, Jackson elected a Chokwe Lumumba as mayor, supported by CJ. He died after less than a year in office, and the circumstances surrounding his death are murky . His son, who seems to be somewhat less radical, is currently the mayor of Jackson.
This book is a revision of a previous book entitled Jackson Rising, and one of its two biggest flaws is that it doesn't distinguish well between older essays and current ones (or revisions of older ones). So a good deal of the book examines the time before the pandemic, right around or shortly after Lumumba's death. So it is difficult to sort out what was true at the beginning of CJ, what changed in the 2010s, and what's true now. (The other big flaw is that it's quite repetitive.)
The book reveals an exciting vision of a Black business corridor (the original plan was to build a 3D printing corridor, which may have changed) which works with a progressive local government to build an economic base, maintaining intense global relationships with other emerging cultures. The leaders and essay writers are generally clear-eyed and thoughtful. They want to build electoral power into their strategy without ever seeing electoral power as a solution. They understand (and come to understand more deeply) just how difficult it is to engage and involve a defeated population. They are energized by their connections around the world.
And, in the face of endless obstacles, they don't give up. The book was printed too early to mention the Jackson water crisis, which appears to be still going on more than a year later. I would love to know how CJ is involved in that and what effect they have had--clearly not enough.
In the end, this comes down to the kind of story that people like me use to grasp for hope, while most of the story is about failures or at least minimal small successes. So a hard book to read, and also full of long-term food for thought.