How to Activate Collaborative Change within a Competitive, Oligarchy-Influenced System
European leaders are talking seriously about a “Green Social Deal”—a vision for a more sustainable, inclusive Europe. But underneath the rhetoric lies a paradox: the EU continues to operate largely as a top-down, competitive, oligarchy-driven system. Meanwhile, Marinaleda, a small town in Andalusia, offers a radically different model—one born of community-led solidarity and participatory democracy. Could Europe learn from these grassroots alternatives?
- Scale & Origin
EU Social Contract
- A technocratic endeavor stretching across 27 member states.
- Shaped by political compromise, economic interests, and powerful lobby groups.
Marinaleda Model
- Emerged bottom-up through community action—land occupations, collective pressure, local solidarity.
- Rooted in lived experience and direct democracy, not policy decree.
- Governance & Decision-Making
Feature | EU Model | Marinaleda Model |
Structure | Representative assemblies, committees | Direct democracy with quorum-based town meetings |
Citizen Participation | Advisory, electoral | Frequent, binding open forums |
Influence of Oligarchy | Significant (lobbyists, corporate power) | Minimal—decisions stem from citizen will |
EU Imperatives:
- Implement binding local assemblies for budget decisions.
- Create regional cooperative foundations insulated from lobbying.
- Introduce citizen veto power on major policies.
- Economic Model & Finance
EU Model
- Competitive markets with green overlays (ETS, subsidies).
- Dominated by corporations and financial interests.
Marinaleda Model
- Non-capitalist cooperatives, collective municipal economy.
- Profits reinvested in the community—no exploitation, no shareholders.
EU Pilots:
- Launch cooperative enterprise schemes in regions.
- Create a European Cooperative Development Fund to rival oligarchic investment.
- Enact anti-consolidation laws to protect local economies.
- Housing & Public Goods
EU Model
- Market-driven housing, supplemented by subsidies—frequently speculative.
Marinaleda Model
- Self-built homes with stable €15 monthly rent, no speculation, community ownership.
EU Actions:
- Establish land trusts and community-build programs city-wide.
- Ban speculative investments in designated zones.
- Promote large-scale cohousing cooperatives.
- Civic Empowerment vs. Lobby Power
EU Model
- Lobbyists and corporate coalitions have disproportionate influence.
Marinaleda Model
- Virtually no external lobbying—decisions reflect citizen consensus.
EU Reforms:
- Publicly fund civic movements and independent oversight.
- Enforce conflict-of-interest and transparency laws.
- Empower citizen assemblies with veto authority over lobby-influenced deals.
- What It Would Take in a Competitive/Oligarchy-Influenced System
To shift toward a Marinaleda-like model, the EU would need to:
- Radical Transparency
– Ban dark money, restrict lobbyist access to civil servants, and publish all draft policies. - Participatory Democracy
– Channel a portion of public budgets directly to citizen assemblies and make their decisions binding. - Parallel Economic Ecosystems
– Fund and support regionally-based cooperatives and collective enterprises independent of corporate
finance. - Regenerative Public Commons
– Legally protect housing, utilities, and green spaces as shared, co-owned assets. - Scaled Living Experiments
– Pilot cooperative policies regionally, document outcomes, and build political awareness. - Rebuild Public Narrative
– Showcase Marinaleda-style models not as fringe anomalies, but as practical visions of participatory
democracy.
Final Thought
Marinaleda proves that it’s possible to build a cooperative system within—rather than outside of—a competitive societal framework. But scaling that model across the entire EU—in a system where power is dominated by corporate and oligarchic interests—requires strategic shifts:
- Democratize budget and policy control at every level.
- Establish a parallel ecosystem of cooperatives, housing collectives, and citizens’ assemblies.
- Strong safeguards against lobbying and economic domination.
This isn’t utopia—it’s intentional design for system change. By planting cooperative alternatives within existing structures, we can set in motion a scalable continental transformation.
Govert van Ginkel
This article is written by Govert van Ginkel. Govert specializes in Nonviolent and Effective Communication and is active in this field as a trainer, speaker, coach, and mediator. More information about Govert can be found here. The current training offer can be found here
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