Wednesday, April 8, 2020

Author Interview: Benita Matofska, Generation Share



Benita Matofska is the author of Generation Share: The Change Makers Building the Sharing Economy, a new book from Policy Press. The book features stunning photographs by Sophie Sheinwald and interviews highlighting 200 case studies of the new worldwide sharing movement.


Benita talked with Rose City Reader about the sharing economy, Generation Share, and COVID-19:

What is the "sharing economy" referred to in the title of your book Generation Share: The Change-Makers Building the Sharing Economy?

The Sharing Economy is much more than a collection of new types of Silicon Valley backed ventures, it is wide-reaching and changing society as we know it. It is at once an economic system built around the sharing of human and physical resources and a mind-set. The media has presented a very narrow perspective of the Sharing Economy, one that doesn’t represent its wide reaching impact and the spectrum of sharing that is life-saving and is happening around the world. Generation Share evidences this.

I define the Sharing Economy simply: A Sharing Economy is a way of life, where we share available resources, however we can.

With the COVID-19 crisis, we are seeing how the Sharing Economy is enabling us to live and survive this pandemic. From peer-to-peer community food relief efforts, to volunteering support for essential healthcare and emergency services, to online collaborative tools or platforms enabling people to safely work from home and maintain livelihoods, the Sharing Economy is proving to be vital.

Your book is based on interviews with 200 people around the world dedicated to building a sharing economy. What was your process for finding and interviewing these people?

As a global expert and leader in the Sharing Economy since its beginnings in 2008-9, the Founder of non-profit The People Who Share and creator of Global Sharing Week, I have met many change-makers worldwide through my work in this field. The starting point for Generation Share was to draw on my global connections, networks and research conducted over the last decade. I have long been a collector of inspiring, positive stories of sharing and change-making. My process was to organize these into demographics and categories, to represent the breadth of the Sharing Economy, ensure broad coverage, a diversity of people and types of stories. For each destination visited, I identified a strong "feature story" and then contacted key organisations, social entrepreneurs, community activists and change-makers in those locations who have a focus on sharing, sustainability, community, social enterprise to unearth further stories. These organisations in turn connected me to change-makers. UnLtd India, for example, introduced me to several change-makers in their network including Ashok Rathod, our Football Sharer and Inir Pinheiro, our Village Sharer. The reality is that I uncovered a tsunami of change-making and inspiring people transforming society, many more stories than I could possibly include in the Generation Share book.

Selection was difficult and I made decisions based on the following criteria: the passion of the change-maker, the social impact of their work, how they represented a part or aspect of the Sharing Economy, whether their work propelled wider, sustainable systemic change, the potential visual impact of the story and the diversity of people, representing a broad range of demographics. For each change-maker in the book though, there are thousands of others who I could have featured. The 200 change-makers who appear are really a taster of who is out there. Each person interviewed for the book was asked a simple question: "What does Sharing mean to you?" The result is an array of different perspectives, that each make up the whole and demonstrate the broad spectrum of the Sharing Economy.

The photographs in the book capture the energy and excitement of your message. Tell us a little about Sophie Sheinwald, the photographer you collaborated with on this project, and how you came to work with her.

Several academic books have been written about the Sharing Economy and I wanted to do something different. I specifically chose to write a book that contained powerful visual messaging, in order to reach and resonate with broader audiences. I had known Sophie Sheinwald for several years both personally and professionally and saw in her work an ability to capture human emotion and the power of sharing or connection. I invited her to join me on this journey because I knew she would be able to make these incredible change-maker stories visible, in a deep, impactful, human way. The response has been extraordinary; a frequent comment from readers worldwide is that they feel they "know these people," that the stories speak directly to them and inspire change.

What is your professional background and how did it lead to your involvement in the sharing economy movement?

I had a successful 20-year career in broadcasting and journalism. I worked for BBC Radio, then television in the UK before relocating to New York for 8 years in 1995. I have always been a speaker, a storyteller, fascinated by creating positive societal change by showcasing stories of transformation and community. In 2009, I moved into the charity sector in order to help inspire positive impact on people and planet. As Head of Global Entrepreneurship for a (then existing) charity called Enterprise UK, I led a worldwide campaign inspiring young people to be entrepreneurial for the benefit of the planet and society at large. In 2010, I was invited to be a "counselor" for the One Young World Congress and had the very humbling experience of sharing a platform with world-leading human rights activist Desmond Tutu. Inspired by this experience, I realized, that although our planetary resources may be finite, our potential to share is unlimited and if we could unleash our unlimited potential to share, there is no end to what we could achieve. I pledged that my mission would be to build a worldwide movement based on the sharing of human and physical resources and campaign for a caring, sharing economy. In January 2011, I launched The People Who Share, a charity that cares for the planet and people in need by promoting and enabling the sharing of human and physical resources. Our flagship campaign is Global Sharing Week, which takes place each June and reaches and inspires over 100 million people worldwide to care for the planet and share resources with people living in hardship.

Who is your intended audience for your book?

The target audience for Generation Share is young, millennial, educated, socially conscious, English speakers. That said, the book showcases stories from 30 countries worldwide from a variety of demographics, cutting across age, financial status, urban, rural, developed, developing countries, gender and disability. The narrative, the visuals and the presentation are accessible and consequently, Generation Share is resonating with a broader audience from a variety of diverse backgrounds. In addition, given that this book is sustainably produced from 100% waste materials with each copy sold helping to educate a girl in the slums in Mumbai and plant a tree, audiences are able to ‘share’ in the positive impact created and make a difference with each purchase.

What will readers learn from your book?

Generation Share evidences the power of Sharing to save and transform lives. I believe that to change the world, we need to change the narrative. By showcasing these trailblazers and bringing their stories of positive change and activism to life through remarkable photography and first-hand interviews, readers are being inspired to create their own projects of change and know that change is possible. We all have change-maker potential and Generation Share is about unleashing this inner change-maker in order to positively impact society and the planet. Generation Share has also been dubbed "the big yellow book of hope," it’s a "dipping-in" book that readers can sample when they are in need of some hope and positivity, particularly relevant with the current COVID-19 crisis. We need connection (albeit mostly virtual) in these challenging times and I believe people are now seeing that the Sharing Economy has come of age.

Do you think there will be more interest in the sharing economy because of the COVID 19 pandemic?

Currently, we are seeing people turning to the Sharing Economy to help them through the COVID-19 pandemic. Out of necessity, people are having to come together (virtually) to help stop the spread of the virus, to support each other often with basic necessities, to reach out to those who are isolated and to help save lives. We are seeing a new kind of active, collective citizenship (sharing) emerging. From COVID-19 mutual aid groups, to community food drives, delivering food to those in quarantine or at risk, to support for vital frontline healthcare workers and virtual check-ins with family and friends. The Sharing Economy technology and platforms that have been developed over the last decade are providing lifelines across the world. From on-demand delivery services, to apps that identify surplus food and divert it to the most needy. Children and young people are benefiting from online teaching and collaborative classroom technology, remote working from home is possible, PPE is being designed and manufactured using the latest technology; pop-up hospitals are being built in under a week to answer intensive care demand; the whole economy has become reliant on cooperation, collaboration and innovative ShareTech. The Sharing Economy over the last 10 years has to a degree been a test-bed for how this pandemic is now being handled. We have seen partnerships across sectors, public, private, charity; groups of all types finding ways to work together virtually to handle the crisis. The Sharing Economy has a lot to answer for. At its heart is the desire to put people and society center stage.

Can you recommend other resources or organizations for people who want to join or learn more about the sharing economy?

The People Who Share has an online resource called The Share Guide. Albeit in need of updating, it has over 7,000 platforms, apps, sharing projects. Shareable has the largest source of online content about sharing. They have a great guide 10 Ways to Share During the COVID-19 Pandemic.

What did you learn from writing your book that most surprised you?

I learned that our collective potential to share is unlimited, world-changing and life-saving. Sharing has the potential to solve world hunger, climate change, and poverty. We have all the resources and capabilities, we just need to share. The coronavirus crisis is already demonstrating the positive impact we can have on the planet by dramatically reducing our consumption, international flights, transport etc. In a matter of weeks, we are seeing the planet breathe again; blue skies in China, fish in Venice…
I set out to discover who were the change-makers building the Sharing Economy and this is the conclusion from the book.

"This is a pan-generational, pan-geographical, pan-economic, pan-gender group. They demonstrate explicitly that Sharing knows no boundaries. Generation Share, rather than a demographic, is a mind-set, a lifestyle that we can choose to adopt. It represents a new consciousness that is emerging, an awareness that consumption doesn’t lead to happiness or wellbeing, but that through Sharing and harnessing the power of technology for good, we can create a more equal, human, happy, healthy, resource efficient, connected and sustainable economy.

What’s apparent is that Sharing is everywhere, if we look for it. It’s in our homes, our communities, our schools, our businesses, our cities, our villages. It’s within each of us, in unlimited supply. Sharing isn’t an age thing, a gender thing, a culture thing; it’s simply, a human thing. As Generation Share shows, to share is to be human."

What is the most valuable advice you’ve been given as an expert on the sharing economy?

The most valuable advice was given to me at the start of my journey over a decade ago. A fellow social entrepreneur told me to find my purpose and once I had identified that, use that to solve any problem or challenge I encountered. To this day, when faced with a challenge, I ask myself – "what difference would ‘sharing’ make to that situation / challenge?" It’s incredible how that serves me.

What else would you like people to know about your book or the sharing economy?

The production of this book is important. We deliberately sought out a brave, change-maker publisher, aligned with the values of Generation Share. Policy Press has been incredibly collaborative and has worked with us to produce a high quality, ethical product, made from 100% waste materials. Each copy sold educates a girl in the slums in Mumbai (via Aarti Naik’s Sakhi school for girls) and plants a tree (via the Eden Reforestation Project). The inks used in the book are organic and every aspect has been mindfully considered and fairly produced. The book is also designed and presented in a very accessible way, so people can easily read and connect with it.

What’s next? What are you working on now?

Right now I am working on COVID-19 Food Relief – a mass participation, emergency food campaign and call to action, to ensure that we let nobody in the UK go hungry in this crisis. The campaign is run by The People Who Share. We wanted to ensure that our most basic need is met and that anyone anywhere can help or be helped. Rather than duplicating what is already being done, we will act as an amplifier for the multitude of food projects and initiatives that are helping the most vulnerable. As The People Who Share, we will do what we do best by sharing information, ensuring a mass, collective effort to help as many people as possible survive this pandemic. Nobody should go hungry, especially not now.

I have also started a blog called Love in the Time of Corona, sharing positive stories of hope, social action and kindness at this extraordinary time. This may become a bigger project in and of itself. In terms of my public speaking all live events are obviously cancelled for now, but I’ll be doing online events, webinars and masterclasses over the coming months, focusing on change-making, inspiring positive social action and creating value for people and planet.

THANKS BENITA!

GENERATION SHARE IS AVAILABLE ONLINE IN THE US, OR IN THE UK AND ELSEWHERE.


Tuesday, April 7, 2020

Teaser Tuesday: Her Sister's Tattoo by Ellen Meeropol



Her Sister's Tattoo, Ellen Meeropol's new novel, launches today from Red Hen Press! Here's a teaser:

Waiting for Jake or Esther to answer their doorbell the next afternoon, Allen admitted to himself that he probably shouldn’t have come. He could have telephoned with the news, or even asked Rosa’s lawyer to tell them.

There's no big bash for publication day when everyone is inside and socially distancing. But that means there are online events we can all watch on Ellen's author webpage, where you can also order the book in paperback or ebook.

PUBLISHER'S DESCRIPTION
In August 1968, Rosa and Esther Cohen march through downtown Detroit protesting the war in Vietnam. The march is peaceful, but when a bloodied teenager describes a battle with mounted police a few blocks away, the sisters hurry to offer assistance. Trying to stop the violence, they instead intensify it. An officer is seriously injured. Rosa and Esther are arrested and charged with conspiracy and attempted murder.

For Rosa, their arrest offers an opportunity to make a political statement, another way to protest an unacceptable war. Esther wants to avoid prison and stay home with her infant daughter, Molly; the only way to do that is to accept a plea bargain and testify against Rosa at trial. The consequences of these actions lead one sister underground and to prison, the other to leave town to bury her past in a new life. Molly grows up unaware of her family history until she meets Rosa's daughter, her cousin Emma, at summer camp.

Told from multiple points of view and through the sisters' never-mailed letters, and bracketed by the Vietnam and Iraq wars, HER SISTER'S TATTOO explores the thorny intersection of sibling loyalty and clashing political decisions.
Read my earlier interview with Ellen Meeropol here, about her novel Kinship of Clover.


Teaser Tuesdays is hosted by The Purple Booker. Participants share a two-sentence teaser from the book they are reading or featuring. Please remember to include the name of the book and the author. You can share your teaser in a comment below, or with a comment or link at the Teaser Tuesday site, where you can find the official rules for this weekly event.

Monday, April 6, 2020

Mailbox Monday: The Sweeney Sisters by Lian Dolan

One new book came my way last week: The Sweeney Sisters by Lian Dolan.



The Sweeney Sisters sounds terrific. It’s a family comedy about three sisters gathered for their father’s wake, only to discover that their dad had a secret daughter. Author Lian Dolan is one of the Satellite Sisters from the popular and long-running podcast. The book comes out April 28 and is available for pre-order.

FROM THE AUTHOR'S WEBSITE:

With the rise of at home DNA tests, we’ve all heard stories or had our own experiences uncovering family secrets – sometimes good, maybe a little sad, and occasionally secrets that should have remained just that. In her new novel THE SWEENEY SISTERS (On Sale April 28, 2020), Lian Dolan delivers a brilliant and entertaining story about books, love, sisterhood, and what makes up a family, tapping into the zeitgeist of 23 and Me, Ancestry.com and the surprises we can discover in our DNA.

Maggie, Liza, and Tricia Sweeney grew up as a happy threesome in the idyllic seaside town of Southport, Connecticut. But their mother’s death from cancer fifteen years ago tarnished their golden-hued memories, and the sisters drifted apart. Their one touchstone is their father, Bill Sweeney, an internationally famous literary lion and college professor universally adored by critics, publishers, and book lovers. When Bill dies unexpectedly one cool June night, his shell-shocked daughters return to their childhood home. They aren’t quite sure what the future holds without their larger-than-life father, but they do know how to throw an Irish wake to honor a man of his stature.

But as guests pay their respects and reminisce, one stranger, emboldened by whiskey, has crashed the party. It turns out that she too is a Sweeney sister.




Thanks for joining me for Mailbox Monday, a weekly "show & tell" blog event where participants share the books they acquired the week before. Visit the Mailbox Monday website to find links to all the participants' posts and read more about Books that Caught our Eye.

Mailbox Monday is graciously hosted by Leslie of Under My Apple Tree, Serena of Savvy Verse & Wit, and Martha of Reviews by Martha's Bookshelf.

Saturday, April 4, 2020

Author Interview: Thomas R. Cox, The Other Oregon


Historian and author Thomas R. Cox has written widely about environmental, social, and economic history. In his new book, The Other Oregon: People, Environment, and History East of the Cascades (OSU Press), he returns to his roots in Eastern Oregon to explore a diverse and under-appreciated region of the Pacific Northwest.


Tom recently talked with Rose City Reader about his book and Eastern Oregon, a part of the country he knows and loves:

Why did you call your book The Other Oregon

There is a well-established image of Oregon: wet, green, timbered, and liberal. Yet this is an image that hardly fits in two-thirds of the state. The lands east of the Cascades, largely overlooked, are a very different place.

How did you come to write a book about Eastern Oregon? 

I was raised and long worked in Central and Eastern Oregon. I loved it then and it haunts me still. Disturbed by how little it is understood (and even dismissed as irrelevant) and thinking it had a story that can provide insights into areas and problems far beyond its borders, I felt compelled to present its many-sided story.

Your book is engaging as well as comprehensive. How did you research the history, geography, and environment of the region to give the details you include?

I have an unusually diverse background. In addition to graduate training as an historian, I did undergraduate field work in botany and anthropology. I have worked in sawmills, as a rural mail carrier, on forest fire crews, and on fire lookouts; and I have lived and worked in small towns in Central Oregon, the Blue Mountains, and Klamath Basin. Through all this I acquired a breadth of contacts well beyond what I gained in academia.

Who is the audience for your book? What does it offer for readers who don’t have a personal connection to Eastern Oregon?

Everyone has roots that shape his or her values and attitudes. More often than not, these roots spring from their home place—the land—rather than from built environments. The story of the interaction of people and the land east of the Cascades can aid in the self-understanding of people wanting to know who they are and from whence they have come regardless of their place of residence at the moment.

What did you learn from writing your book – either about the subject of the book or the writing process – that most surprised you?

I knew before I started that I would be dealing with a complex, multi-faceted story, but I was unprepared for just how intertwined the elements of its story would prove to be—and by how much its story reflects on the experience of the wider West.

What is something you wish everyone knew about Eastern Oregon?

I wish more people realized that the people east of the Cascades have come to love and husband their land. They are hardly the exploitive rape-and-run villains that some urbanites and environmentalists paint them as being.

What is your work background? How did it lead you to writing this book?

As indicated above, my varied early work experience gave me understandings (and contacts) that I would never have gained from a traditional academic program. My experience teaching a conservation course at Sisters High School even before Rachel Carson and others launched the environmental revolution provided additional preparation. And my academic studies of state parks, the lumber industry, and Native American land issues led me further along the path to this multi-faceted study.

What do you like to read? What books are on your nightstand right now?

I am an eclectic—and insatiable—reader. I love well-crafted mysteries set in unusual places: Peter May’s trilogy set in the Outer Hebrides, William Kent Krueger’s works in the Boundary Waters/Chippewa country of northern Minnesota, Martin Walker’s stories from the Dordogne in France. I also love the late Ivan Doig’s works, especially his Last Bus to Wisdom. But I read histories too; I recently read three biographies of U.S. Grant back to back (and came away convinced another is needed). And I just completed David Robert’s The Pueblo Revolt, a remarkable blending of history and personal experience.

What is the most valuable advice you’ve been given as an author?

Write about what you know—and don’t be in a hurry, the mark of a good historian (and no doubt of others) is the capacity to take infinite care.

Do you have any events coming up to promote your book? 

Not really. Being 87 years old and living in Idaho hardly puts me in a position to do “events.”

What’s next? What are you working on now?

I wish I knew. I am tempted to tackle a revisionist view of the Grant presidency. But more probably I will undertake a study of the history of the Wada-Tika (Burns Paiutes), a study that would draw on oral traditions, historical records, Indian Claims Commission reports, interviews, and more. Time will tell.

THANKS TOM!

THE OTHER OREGON IS AVAILABLE FROM ONLINE SELLERS AND DIRECTLY FROM OSU PRESS.


Friday, April 3, 2020

Gilbert ("Gil") George Geihs: August 8, 1939 – March 9, 2020


Yes, this is a departure from books. My dad passed away last month. He was a wonderful man and I want to post a tribute to him that will stay online. So here it is:

Gilbert ("Gil") George Geihs: August 8, 1939 – March 9, 2020

Gilbert George Geihs, native Nebraskan and long-time Oregonian, passed away on March 9, 2020 at the age of 80, after a short battle with AL amyloidosis.

Gil was born in Omaha, Nebraska, to Fritz and Dorothy Geihs, the middle of five siblings. He graduated from Central High School in 1957 and was still friends with many of his classmates more than 60 years later. He enjoyed his youth and told many hilarious tales about his childhood and high school years.

While attending the University of Nebraska at Omaha, Gil met Peggy Jean Herman, who caught his eye as the “Sweater Girl” of his Theta Chi fraternity. The two married during the Spring Break of their senior year in 1961 and remained married until his death. In 2011, they celebrated their 50th anniversary with a family reunion trip to the Bavarian village where Gilbert’s father Fritz was born and his family still owned a mountain inn. Gilbert was as close with his relatives in Germany as he was with his family in America.

After college, Gil and his best friend joined the U.S. Coast Guard, which was a big adventure to two young men from Nebraska. They served six months active duty and Gil got a lifetime of funny stories out of the experience.

Gil had a long career in real estate. In 1975, he started Progress West Corp., a successful commercial real estate company in Omaha. In 1981, looking for a milder climate, Gil and Peggy moved with their family to Portland, Oregon. Gil managed the commercial real estate holdings of Willamette Savings & Loan until it was dissolved in 1990. His most unusual job as a realtor was overseeing the auction of all the artwork from the bank’s branches and offices. After Willamette closed, Gil worked in commercial property management at Norris & Stevens in Portland until he retired in 2005.

Gil’s two daughters Gilion and Tennison were born in 1966 and 1968. He also took into his home Sina Mansouri, a foster daughter from Afghanistan, who lived with the family from age 14 until college. No daughters could ask for a kinder or funnier dad. He built them a backyard playhouse, a lemonade “store,” and the world’s most dangerous go cart. He won over their friends when he built a dune buggy from a VW Bug. When they were in high school and college, he let the girls and their friends have parties in his house, which made him quite popular. Gil remained close with all three daughters throughout their lives and Gilion and Tennison were with him when he passed away.

With his love of story telling and for explaining things, Gil was always popular with kids and young adults, many who now consider him to have been a mentor or father figure to them. Whether opening his home for a place to stay, finding a job, or diagramming a plan on the back of a napkin, Gil always made an effort for the young people in his life.

Visiting and reminiscing with family and friends were Gil’s favorite pastimes. He was a consummate storyteller and made everyone laugh with his quick wit and jovial humor. It seems like he always had a smile on his face and a sparkle in his eye. Gil and Peggy enjoyed many trips with friends or often to visit Bavarian relatives. The best trips were the ones with their daughters, like a trip to Austria and Italy last summer to celebrate Gilbert and Peggy’s 80th birthdays.

Gilbert is survived by his wife Peggy, daughters Gilion Dumas (husband, James) and Tennison Geihs, first cousin once removed Georg Geiss whom he considered a son, second cousin once removed Friederike Baliamis whom he considered a daughter, brother Paul, sisters Judy Douglas and Dorothy Stevens, uncle David Getzschman whom he considered another brother, and many nephews, nieces, cousins, and other family members. He was predeceased by his father and mother, foster daughter Sina Mansouri, brother Fred, brother-in-law Robert Douglas, and his favorite little doggies Frances, Stella, and Minnie.

Memorial services will be held in Omaha and Portland at a future date.

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