Stanford University Graduate School of Education UNDERGRADUATE HONORS Collective governance in student housing cooperatives Alexander T. Kindel May 2014 A Thesis in partial fulfillment of the requirements for Undergraduate Honors Approvals: Honors Program Director: ____________________________________ Deborah Stipek, Ph.D. Honors Advisor: ___________________________________ Mitchell Stevens, Ph.D. Abstract Student housing cooperatives, or co-ops, are hybrid organizations that combine bureaucratic and communitarian organizational logics. Despite the inherent tension between these dual ways of organizing communal life, student co-ops are remarkably long-lived intentional communities, lasting over decades of constantly shifting membership and leadership. Collective governance, through which student co-ops manage to survive as communitarian projects in bureaucratic organizations, is the central phenomenon of interest in this study. How does the practice of collective governance in student co-ops enable students to negotiate between competing organizational forms and sustain a cooperative way of life? Through participant- observation of sixteen group decision-making meetings in two student co-ops, I depict the practice of collective governance in student co-ops as constituted in two parallel processes: managerial decision-making and collective decision-making. These systems reflect the hybridization of bureaucracy and communitarianism into a dynamic organizational form centered on negotiation and compromise. These findings suggest that while bureaucracy and communitarianism may be incompatible organizational logics, structured efforts toward compromise between them can itself be the basis for robust communal projects. ii Acknowledgements First and foremost, I want to acknowledge the immense trust that Kingman and Columbae placed in me as a researcher. Thank you for inviting me into your communities, feeding me unfailingly delicious meals, and teaching me more about cooperative living than I could have ever anticipated. I could never have finished this thesis without the intellectual guidance of my advisors and mentors. I am particularly indebted to Mitchell Stevens, who introduced me to different ways of thinking about cooperative living and inspired me to think analytically at every stage of the research process. I also want to thank Deborah Stipek, for critically evaluating my ideas and challenging me to think more rigorously; Jesse Foster, for providing feedback and support throughout the process; and Jennifer Wolf, for introducing me to qualitative research and inspiring me to study education. I want to give special thanks to my parents, Tom and Micki Kindel, as well as my siblings Aimee, Heather, and Nathan—I am incredibly lucky to have your unconditional support and love in all that I do, and I am grateful that I can continue to learn from you. Finally, I want to thank Elizabeth Matus, who introduced me to cooperative living and without whom I would never have thought to write this thesis. iii Table of Contents Introduction ..................................................................................................................................... 1 Research summary .......................................................................................................................... 5 Kingman ...................................................................................................................................... 6 Columbae .................................................................................................................................... 7 Methods ....................................................................................................................................... 8 Findings......................................................................................................................................... 11 Managerial decision-making .................................................................................................... 12 Collective decision-making ....................................................................................................... 18 Membership............................................................................................................................... 25 Discussion ..................................................................................................................................... 35 References ..................................................................................................................................... 40 iv Introduction On March 13, 2014, the Berkeley Student Cooperative voted to convert Cloyne Court, a student-run cooperative house, into a substance-free academic theme house. To achieve this transformation, the BSC’s proposal included a near-complete removal of Cloyne’s current membership; the proposal stipulated that all but one of its members were prohibited from continuing to live in the co-op. While Cloyne would still be run cooperatively by students, the proposal represented an overarching change in the culture that Cloyne’s current membership had organically established. To call this a controversial decision would be to radically understate the situation; the proposal was debated by over two hundred BSC members, mostly undergraduates, for more than ten hours before the final decision was made. This thesis is about the relationship between communities like Cloyne and organizations like the BSC. While student co-ops share many similarities with other kinds of communal living, their close relationship to other organizations requires closer attention. To some extent, all intentional communities are characterized by “a dynamic relationship between intentional community and the host society” (Redekop 1976). What makes student co-ops distinct from other communal forms, however, is the degree to which their survival is predicated on formal relationships with other non-communitarian organizations. Because their members are primarily undergraduates, who only stay for a couple of years at most before moving out, student co-ops experience complete overturn in membership and leadership faster than is typical for intentional communities. Moreover, because they are made up of a transient group of students, student co- ops have very little power to acquire or maintain the material resources (e.g. real estate) needed to sustain themselves. Student co-ops therefore rely on larger institutions, including universities and other 501(c)(3) nonprofit organizations, to provide an organizational infrastructure capable 1 of sustaining the cooperative way of life. In other words, student co-ops are not simply independent communitarian projects—they are also subject to direct oversight and bureaucratic administration by student housing organizations. This organizational situation reflects what anthropologist John Bennett has described as “paradoxes” of communitarianism, or, the “intersection of communitarian principles and practices with the external social reality” (Bennett 1975). There are two distinct ways of organizing at work in student co-ops, each with their own internally consistent logic. As communes, student co-ops strive to take a communitarian approach to the organization of everyday life. However, their communitarian aims are always balanced with the requirements and exigencies of bureaucratic organization that emerge from administrative oversight. Student co-ops are distinctively characterized by this blending of organizational logics; they are a kind of hybrid organization, maintained through a combination of bureaucratic and communitarian ways of structuring everyday life. As the term “paradox” suggests, the hybridization of bureaucratic and communitarian ways of organizing is not an easy task. In reality, the relationship between these dual organizational logics is problematic, unstable, and constantly in flux. In his theorization about bureaucracy, Max Weber (1946) noted that “bureaucracy is the means of carrying ‘community action’ over into rationally ordered ‘societal action.’ … Under otherwise equal conditions, a ‘societal action,’ which is methodically ordered and led, is superior to every resistance of ‘mass’ or even of ‘communal action.’” In other words, Weber suggests that bureaucratic organization is fundamentally at odds with communitarian organization, and in most cases supersedes it in the establishment of social structure. Consequently, to maintain a communitarian project within a bureaucratic organization is a particularly challenging task, one which faces students with 2 particular kinds of collective problems. Indeed, living cooperatively with others is far from a simple proposition. Making a communal lifestyle work requires students to participate regularly in everyday household tasks, often including cooking communal meals, cleaning up common areas, and participating in collective decision-making meetings. When problems come up, they are typically logistical in nature, and in many cases involve discussions about everyday facts of life: what food the co-op eats, who lives in which rooms, etc. As in all communal projects, however, the basic acts of everyday living are fundamentally ideological; “people really do attempt to turn their ideals into organizational reality” (Stevens 2001). Disagreements in student co-ops are never simply about minor details like food or membership—they reveal the ideals that members want the communal project to represent. To resolve ideological differences, students must actively work toward partial solutions in order to maintain the communal project. Bennett Berger’s examination of ideological work in intentional communities provides a useful framework for understanding how communes go about addressing these issues. Berger writes that “when problems or crises like these occur… a variety of solutions are conceivable (although solutions is probably not the right word since these problems are seldom clearly solved—“negotiations” may be a better word)” (Berger 1981:21). Berger’s larger point here is that the problems that communes face often do not have an objective solution; nonetheless, they must be addressed. To do so, Berger writes, “a group may accommodate its beliefs to the circumstances it cannot alter, while manipulating those it can to achieve the best bargain it can get” (Berger 1981:21). Because student co-ops are characterized by two foundationally incompatible ways of organizing, as Weber suggests, this process of accommodation is of particular theoretical interest. In general, communes survive through 3 ideological compromise, but in student co-ops, compromise also reflects a process of accommodation between two distinct organizational forms. My aim in this study is to show how student co-ops negotiate toward organizational compromise through formalized systems of collective governance. As I will show, the specific procedures through which student co-ops negotiate this organizational relationship vary based on the particular characteristics of individual communities and the student housing organizations that administer them. That is, student co-ops do not simply follow an organizational script. Rather, each “strikes its own balance and makes its own choices about what it will consider important and what it will give up” (Kanter 1973). At every student co-op, there is always work to be done in figuring out how exactly these dual organizational logics should relate, and what trade-offs members are willing to accept to make cooperative life work. For an ideologically diverse, constantly changing group of students, maintaining a communal way of life under these circumstances is a remarkable feat of cooperation. Collective governance does more than “give students a voice in the operations of the environment in which they spend their time” (NASCO 1990). Fundamentally, collective governance enables students to hybridize two conflicting organizational logics. This is a remarkably successful strategy for promoting the survival of student co-ops; currently, more than 12,000 students live in approximately 250 student co-ops throughout North America (SWOPSI 1990). The survival of these organizations is not coincidental—it is the result of ongoing negotiation between bureaucracy and communitarianism through collective governance. How does the practice of collective governance in student co-ops enable students to negotiate between competing organizational forms and sustain a cooperative way of life? 4 Research summary The organizational structure I depict in this thesis is based on case studies of two student co-ops: Kingman, a co-op in the Berkeley Student Cooperative; and Columbae, a co-op at Stanford University. I have chosen not to use pseudonyms to refer to these co-ops because their names are not merely aesthetic or arbitrary choices; rather, they represent the historical and ideological origins of the communal projects under examination in this thesis. Kingman is named after Harry Kingman, a YMCA director instrumental to the founding of the BSC as a low-cost student housing cooperative during the Great Depression (BSC 2013). Columbae’s name originated from the Latin word for doves, reflecting its guiding theme of nonviolent social change (Dickinson 1971). These histories are essential to my analysis—it would not be possible to explain the organizational logics I observed at Kingman and Columbae without reference to their founding purposes. I selected these cases primarily to contrast the institutional contexts in which student co- ops are situated. Because they are part of the same administrative system, two co-ops at a single university will share some organizational peculiarities, even if their members feel that their internal cultures are very different. For example, the manager roles at Columbae are very similar to the manager roles at other student co-ops at Stanford. So, to get at the relationship between institution and co-op, it was necessary for each case to be a co-op at a different university. Given this comparison, I also sought to study co-ops that used different systems for group decision- making, in order to compare different kinds of collective governance. As I will describe later, a co-op’s approach to decision-making is far from coincidental; it reflects particular choices about how cooperative life should be structured. 5 Kingman Kingman is a 49-member student co-op in the Berkeley Student Cooperative (BSC), a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization which runs seventeen student co-ops in Berkeley, CA. The BSC originated during the Great Depression, aiming to “provide low cost cooperative student housing” (BSC 2013). Although a large proportion of the students who live in the BSC are students at UC Berkeley, the two organizations are independent, and students at any postsecondary institution are eligible to live in Kingman. During the contract period in which this study took place, there were students from local community colleges, students visiting on J-1 visas, and students from other universities in the United States. Kingman residents occasionally refer to the co-op as “Toad Hall,” and correspondingly, sometimes call themselves “Toads.” In Kingman, and in the BSC more generally, members are required to fulfill a set of workshift requirements. This involves some combination of cooking for communal dinners, cleaning common spaces (kitchen, bathrooms), house maintenance/improvement tasks, and other miscellaneous jobs. Some members are chosen by group elections to serve in manager positions (e.g. Workshift Manager, House Manager); managers fulfill additional responsibilities in exchange for monetary compensation and/or workshift hours. While managers take care of some house-level administrative tasks, the BSC (composed of full-time professionals and elected student officials) handles the majority of the administrative work that goes into operating the co- ops, including bookkeeping and building inspections. In the BSC, group decision-making meetings are referred to as council. At council, managers and members are given the opportunity to make announcements to the group, and any member or manager is able to bring a motion for the group’s consideration. Motions are decided by a majority-rule voting system, and discussion on motions loosely follows Roberts’ rules of 6
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