糖心

F&M Stories

Home / Giving / Annual Report of Giving Stories / How Worker Cooperatives Are Supported

How Worker Cooperatives Are Supported

New York City was first in 2015, but since then, municipalities around the United States have joined to support the development of worker cooperatives 鈥 businesses owned and operated by the employees.

鈥淎 lot of people are into co-ops,鈥 says Franklin & Marshall Associate Professor of Government & Public Policy Biko Koenig. 鈥淎 lot of people think they're really cool. And in the United States, there's a lot more smoke than fire. There's a lot more excitement about them than there are actual cooperatives.鈥

With a three-year, $218,000 grant from the , Koenig and his primary collaborators 鈥 Brooklyn College sociology Professor Abby Scher and Melissa Beans 鈥25, an F&M postgraduate research associate 鈥 are examining co-ops鈥 various support structures. 

Specifically, they are looking at the impact of the entrepreneur support organizations (ESOs) that not only help startup cooperative ownership companies, but assist existing businesses to convert into worker co-ops. 

鈥淚n the co-op world, they're called developers, cooperative developers,鈥 Koenig says. 鈥淕roups that are trying to help people start new cooperative businesses, and then when those businesses are started, help them kind of navigate the challenges they find.鈥

Many new worker co-ops were created with the support of these ESOs or developers, but Koenig says there has been 鈥渧ery little research that鈥檚 been done on them.鈥 While high-quality research has been conducted and published by trade groups, cooperative developers have received far less attention from independent researchers.

鈥淭hey're made up of the industry folks; not a lot of external independent research,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e don't even have basic descriptive research.鈥

For Koenig and his collaborators, their project is to figure out what the ESOs are doing exactly.

鈥淲e want to lay out what are the best practices; what things have been going particularly well? What things don't seem to be working well? What's the variation across the country?鈥 he says.

In particular, the researchers are interested in examining co-ops that are one to five years past their initial participation with developers to meet one of the aims of the Kauffman Foundation.

鈥淭he whole structure of the grant, but also the structure of the project, is to be used by developers and by co-op folks themselves and by people in the ecosystem,鈥 Koenig says. 鈥淎s opposed to like, let's write some academic papers and hope people read it. That's actually the secondary goal.鈥

The researchers plan to finish their data collection next spring and finish reports by August. 

鈥淭hen we spend next fall holding community meetings with people in the broader co-op world, report back on what we found, hear from them about what they think about our research, and see if there's ways to actually implement what we found,鈥 Koenig says. 

Related Articles

April 17, 2026

鈥楾his is What Community Feels Like鈥

At the Writers House, Veronique Messanh 鈥26 found more than a job鈥攕he found a home. 鈥淚 remember thinking: 鈥楾his is what community feels like,鈥欌 she said. 鈥淚 will forever be grateful for having a community that sees me, hears me, and encourages me!鈥

April 16, 2026

From F&M to Yale PhD, Quantum Pioneer and the College鈥檚 Youngest Trustee

Yusong (Sebastian) Deng 鈥22 is clear about the importance of F&M in his life. He came to the United States from China at 18 and completed F&M鈥檚 dual degree program 鈥 three years at Franklin & Marshall, two at Columbia University 鈥 earning a bachelor of arts with honors in mathematics from F&M, and a bachelor of science from Columbia. He is now a doctoral student in materials science at Yale and the youngest member of Franklin & Marshall's Board of Trustees.

April 15, 2026

NBA's Ali Narracci 鈥22 Shares Sports Industry Secrets

Working for the NBA is anything but typical. Ali Narracci 鈥22 wouldn't have it any other way. See the top five leadership lessons she鈥檚 learned as assistant manager of global marketing partnerships at the NBA.