Financial Coresponsibility facilitates the gathering and distribution of material resources towards common aims.
It develops and hosts practices which decouple access and participation from exchange, facilitating the flow of sustenance to meeting needs.
Born in the community work of Restorative Circles in Rio de Janeiro in the late 90s, and then making possible the wide spread of Nonviolent Communication throughout Brazil and Restorative Circles internationally, as well as the development of the the first Beta Space education spaces, Financial Coresponsibility has been used in innumerous areas of collaboration by communities and organisations around the world.
Derivations of Financial Coresponsibility, such as the isolated use of it’s most well known practice, the ‘money pile’, are in use in local government, business, freelance work, learning events, collectives and families.