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Student housing cooperative

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A student housing cooperative, also known as co-operative housing, is a housing cooperative for students, known as members. Members live in alternative cooperative housing that they personally own and maintain. These houses are specifically designed to lower housing costs while providing an educational and community environment for students to live and grow in. They are, in general, nonprofit, communal, and self-governing[1] , with students pooling their monetary and personal resources to create a community style home. Many student housing cooperatives share operation and governing of the house. As with most cooperatives, collaboration and community work are done by the members for mutual benefit. Most are members of NASCO.

History

Most student housing cooperatives were formed to provide an alternative dorm for students who were unable to afford college due to housing costs. For example, the Harriet E. Richards House at Boston University was formed to provide a cheap alternative to dorm life for women scholars[2]. The Berkeley Student Cooperative, amongst others, was formed during the Great Depression to help provide affordable food and housing for Berkeley students. Others were formed to provide a more inclusive and supportive environment for students. Many student housing cooperatives are focused around socialist principles or political activism (Michigan Socialist House), veganism or vegetarianism, racial or ethnic identity (Biko), or environmental concerns.

Throughout the twentieth century, student housing cooperatives expanded. Many formed coalitions in the face of rising debt or bankruptcy.

The North American Students of Cooperation (NASCO) was formed in 1968 as a way to link existing cooperatives together while educating and improving cooperatives across North America. Branches of NASCO include Development Services and Properties[3]. Today, NASCO primarily serves as an association that promotes development and communication amongst coops and promotes communal living.

Management of Student Housing Cooperatives

Partial List of Student Housing Cooperatives

United Kingdom

In the United Kingdom, housing cooperatives as a whole are scarce as a form of residence ownership, and was only introduced in earnest in 2004 when MMUnion partnered with the National Union of Students and Confederation of Co-operative Housing to offer cheaper co-operatively owned alternatives to city housing for Manchester Metropolitan University students.[4]

United States

Artist, student and community co-operatives are common in the San Francisco Bay Area. Many of these housing co-operatives are members of organizations such as NASCO. Several of the earliest US student cooperatives (e.g. at Northwestern University and Wellesley College) had begun by at least 1915, for the purpose of housing female students.[5] Other early examples started in the Depression years: Harriet E. Richards Cooperative House at Boston University, founded in 1928, the Cooperative Living Organization at the University of Florida in Gainesville, Florida founded in 1931, and the Michigan Socialist House at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Michigan founded in 1932.

Currently, the biggest student co-op is the Berkeley Student Cooperative, formerly known as the University Students Cooperative Association, in Berkeley, CA with 1300 students living in 17 houses and 3 apartment complexes. Other large-scale co-op systems include the Inter-Cooperative Council at the University of Michigan, MSU Student Housing Cooperative of Michigan State University and UCLA University Cooperative Housing Association with 400+ students.

Other examples of such cooperatives include:

References

  1. ^ "About our Cooperative". MSU Student Housing Cooperative.
  2. ^ "Mission & Founding". HER House.
  3. ^ "About Us". NASCO.
  4. ^ Housing co-op plans for students
  5. ^ The Dean of Women By Lois Kimball Mathews Rosenberry