Community currency

A community currency is a type of complementary currency that is used by groups with a common bond, like members of a locality, or association, and designed to meet their needs. A community currency may be geography-based, making it a type of local currency, or it may be used within a business-based, or online community.

Purposes

Community currencies aim at using money as a tool to achieve social or environmental objectives. According to the New Economics Foundation partner Community Currencies in Action:[1]

... money is simply a social technology and the ways in which it is designed, produced and controlled – far from being neutral or predetermined factors – all influence the effects it has upon society at large.
People Powered Money: designing, developing and delivering community currencies.

Some of the purposes for community currencies identified by Community Currencies in Action[1] include:

Software

Several software packages have been written supporting the management of community currencies.[5] In 1998, Richard Kay, a Senior Lecturer at Birmingham City University,[6] wrote a "Multi-registry System" specification for routing and processing community currency transactions using an approach designed to be decentralized, with no single point of control or failure, using the Domain Name System for server discovery.[7]

References

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