The Zeitschrift für Gemeinwirtschaft und Gemeinwohl (Z'GuG) is an interdisciplinary academic journal with relevance for professional practice (business, politics, civil society). The journal is published as a new series of the Zeitschrift für öffentliche und gemeinwirtschaftliche Unternehmen (ZögU) - Journal for Public and Nonprofit Services. The thematic focus is on public economics in its diversity of sponsors, administrative theory, the social economy, the third sector, cooperatives, as well as topics of importance to civil society such as communalization, neighborhood and district concepts, network development, and social space building. The Z'GuG is open to fundamental theoretical and methodological discussions and takes up topics that require a cultural-scientific, but also philosophical opening, including the social (medical, nursing, educational, etc.) care debates, gender and other diversity controversies, commons theory, and gift and reciprocity research. From these openings, Z'GuG is dedicated to the meta-theme of the common good.
Austria has a comparatively large, privately organised, cost-based rental sector provided by limited-profit housing associations (LPHAs). The article analyses the institutional framework, its market effects, and derives levers for affordable rents...
This article presents the results of a survey of 278 Swiss housing cooperatives regarding their non-profit status, scope of services, management structure, employed management, formal management tools, member mobilization and participation, growth...
Against the backdrop of an ontological and anthropological reassertion of the significance of housing in the context of a phenomenological-hermeneutic determination of the relationship between humans and their environment, in which they are...
The article reconstructs responsive self-transcendence as a socio-psychological enabling condition and a subjectivation-related prerequisite of doing commoning. Starting from the question of why and how people engage in cooperative practice,...
This first part of a two-part article develops the concept of responsive self-transcendence within the natural whole as an experiential grounding of civilizational transformation. Drawing on self-organizing dynamics in the history of existence, the...