Examples of Voluntary Cooperation in the following topics:
-
- There are three main types of cooperation: coerced, voluntary, and unintentional.
- Coerced cooperation is when cooperation between individuals is forced.
- Voluntary cooperation is cooperation to which all parties consent.
- An example of voluntary cooperation would be individuals opting to complete a group project for school when given the option of a group project or an individual project.
- Compare the three types of cooperation (coerced, voluntary and unintentional) and why cooperation is necessary for social reality
-
- Cooperation implies voluntary agreements and a coordinated approach to the solution of a problem.
- The degree to which a choice is voluntary or coerced is not always clear.
- Is the acceptance of group values and activities voluntary or coerced?
- Voluntary cooperation and coerced conscription lie at opposite ends of a continuum.
- The shift from voluntary coordinated behavior (cooperation) to coerced coordinated behavior (conscription) is a matter of degrees.
-
- Cooperatives are independent and democratic organizations in which each member has equal control.
- While it is a business model, it can be applied to a wide variety of other circumstances such as consumer cooperatives, housing cooperatives, credit unions, worker cooperatives, and various non-profit formats.
- Another benefit is that cooperatives are often invested in solving social issues and providing value in their communities.
- No individual owner can derive profit exceeding the fixed interest, nor gain greater control over the operations of the cooperative.
- Consider the potential advantages and disadvantages of a cooperative as an organizational model
-
- Some social contract theorists try to resolve the problem by asserting that government is, in fact, a voluntary association.
- Other social contract theorists, following Rousseau, argue that government ought to be a voluntary association.
- But this does not justify existing governments, which are not voluntary associations.
- Protection they look upon as a thing to be secured, as long as it is necessary, by voluntary association and cooperation for self-defense, or as a commodity to be purchased, like any other commodity, of those who offer the best article at the lowest price.
- Even Tucker's proposed "voluntary association" for securing protection would have to impose sanctions in order to protect its clients.
-
- This association involves a sanction that will be imposed unless the victim cooperates, and if the victim could have nothing at all to do with the robber he would gladly do so.
- Voluntary associations, a third type, are created by the exchange or transfer of inducements or expected inducements by mutual consent.
- Although it is a trust association between the parents (jointly) and their children, it is a voluntary association between husband and wife.
- Voluntary associations can be far larger than a family.
- Hence, the definition of voluntary associations is in terms of inducements or expected inducements.
-
- The codes would contain production, labor, and trade guidelines for each industry in order to limit competition and encourage cooperation.
- NIRA
gave the administration the power to develop voluntary agreements with industries regarding work hours, pay rates, and price fixing.
- In his June 16, 1933 "Statement on the National Industrial Recovery Act," President Roosevelt noted, "On this idea, the first part of the NIRA proposes to our industry a great spontaneous cooperation to put millions of men back in their regular jobs this summer. " He further stated, "But if all employers in each trade now band themselves faithfully in these modern guilds, without exception, and agree to act together and at once, none will be hurt and millions of workers-- so long deprived of the right to earn their bread in the sweat of their labor-- can raise their heads again.
- The agency now promoted industrial cooperation and produced economic studies.
- Participation was voluntary, but businesses without the Eagle were often boycotted.
-
- One parent households, cohabitation, same sex families, and voluntary childless couples are increasingly common.
- Pairing off into formal or informal marital relationships originated in hunter-gatherer groups to forge networks of cooperation beyond the immediate family.
- Voluntary childlessness in women is defined as women of childbearing age who are fertile and do not intend to have children, women who have chosen sterilization, or women past childbearing age who were fertile but chose not to have children.
-
- Interest groups are any voluntary associations that seek to publicly promote and create advantages for their cause.
- The term interest group refers to nearly any voluntary association that seeks to publicly promote and create advantages for its cause.
- A Special Interest Group (SIG) is a community with an interest in advancing a specific area of knowledge, learning, or technology where members cooperate to affect or to produce solutions within their particular field.
-
- The United Nations (UN) is an intergovernmental, international organization consisting of all 193 states in the world, whose stated aims are facilitating cooperation in international law, international security, economic development, social progress, human rights, and the achievement of world peace.
- The United Nations was established to replace the flawed League of Nations, in order to maintain international peace and promote cooperation in solving international economic, social and humanitarian problems.
- The Economic and Social Council promotes international economic and social progress through cooperation and development.
- The UN is financed from assessed and voluntary contributions from member states.
-
- Voluntary respiration is any type of respiration that is under conscious control.
- Voluntary respiration is important for the higher functions that involve air supply, such as voice control or blowing out candles.
- The primary motor cortex is the neural center for voluntary respiratory control.
- More broadly, the motor cortex is responsible for initiating any voluntary muscular movement.
- Different parts of the cerebral cortex control different forms of voluntary respiration.