Federation of Egalitarian Communities
The Federation of Egalitarian Communities (FEC) is a group of egalitarian communities[1] which have joined together with the common purpose of creating a lifestyle based on equality, cooperation, and harmony with the Earth.[2][3]
There are seven full-member communities in the FEC, all of which share the primary values of egalitarianism, non-violence and income-sharing. Approximately 200 people live in the various communities. The organization offers various programs to its member communities, including outreach, labor exchange and catastrophic health care coverage.[4][5]
In addition to the full membership, the FEC has lower levels of membership, such as "Allied" or "Community in Dialog". These are for communities that may share some, but not all of the FEC values, or who are not prepared for full membership.[6]
Principles
Each of the full-member FEC communities holds the following values:[7]
- Holds its land, labor, income and other resources in common
- Assumes responsibility for the needs of its members, receiving the products of their labor and distributing these and all other goods equally, or according to need
- Practices non-violence
- Uses a form of decision making in which members have an equal opportunity to participate, either through consensus, direct vote, or right of appeal or overrule
- Actively works to establish the equality of all people and does not permit discrimination on the basis of race, class, creed, ethnic origin, age, sex, sexual orientation, or gender identity
- Acts to conserve natural resources for present and future generations while striving to continually improve ecological awareness and practice
- Creates processes for group communication and participation and provides an environment which supports people's development.
Current communities
The following communities are full members of the Federation of Egalitarian Communities:
- Acorn Community in Virginia
- East Wind Community in Missouri
- Emma Goldman Finishing School in Washington
- Living Energy Farm in Virginia
- The Midden in Ohio
- Sandhill Community in Missouri
- Twin Oaks Community in Virginia
Communities in Dialog
The following communities share most or all of the Federation principles and consider full membership as an option for the future.
References
- ↑ O'Brien, Ellen. Some communes have survived -- and prospered -- beyond the '60s. Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service. 23 Sept. 1996.
- ↑ ic.org
- ↑ Diggers and Dreamers
- ↑ OFC
- ↑ Utopias and Utopians By R. C. S. Trahair
- ↑ FEC Communities
- ↑ FEC Principles