Webinar: How do you fund it? In this first seminar in the New European Bauhaus meets Community Economies series, we map the monetary and non-monetary inputs that allowed the community academy La Foresta and the multispecies produciton space Krater (SLO) to emerge. We also look into what inputs allow our organisations and spaces to continue over time. To do so we start from a redesign of the community economies iceberg image proposed by feminist economists J.K. Gibson-Graham to frame economic diversity. The mapping tool we propose will show what makes our practices work over time, by dividing them by monetary and non-monetary resources. Many of us will agree that “How do you fund it?!” is a recurring question when referring to our practices, and often the context is not so simple to explain. At the end, the map will show the visible and invisible economic strengths of your organization, the closest allies, the level of community support of your organization. Co-funded by the European Union as part of Erasmus+: Small Scale Partnership in Adult Education – KA210-ADU-EBA01025_2. The project is a collaboration between La Foresta – accademia di comunità and Trajna. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Education and Culture Executive Agency (EACEA). Neither the European Union nor EACEA can be held responsible for them. PrintFriendly