Name Robert Swann Role Land trust pioneer | ||
Books Building Sustainable Communities: Tools and Concepts for Self-reliant Economic Change | ||
Organizations founded New Economy Coalition |
Robert Swann (March 26, 1918 – January 13, 2003) was a community land trust pioneer, Georgist, and peace activist in the United States. He was born in Cleveland Heights, Ohio and died in Great Barrington, Massachusetts. According to his obituary, "Swann dedicated more than a half century of his life to non-violence, desegregation, appropriate technology, affordable housing, land trusts, community credit, worker cooperatives and local currency".
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Swann was a conscientious objector during World War II and was imprisoned. In 1967, Swann signed a public statement declaring his intention to refuse to pay income taxes in protest against the U.S. war against Vietnam.
Community Land Trusts
In 1969, Swann, Slater King, and Faye Bennett founded New Communities, Inc., a five thousand acre land trust in Lee County, Georgia in order to secure long term community land ownership by landless Southern blacks. In her 2004 E.F. Schumacher Lecture on Swann, Stephanie Mills said: "Bob Swann's innovation and formalization of the community land trust is one of his most important contributions to economic alternatives." She also suggests influences on Swann that led to the creation of the community land trust as "research in Israel on the Jewish National Fund's land trust, certainly Henry George's thinking about the evil consequences of land speculation, and Vinoba Bhave's Bhoodan or land-gift movement; and J. P. Narayan's Gramdan gift movement in India."
See also: New Communities and Community Land Trust
Birth of the E.F. Schumacher Society
In the late 1960s, Ralph Borsodi and Swann established the International Independence Institute, which became the Institute for Community Economics (ICE) in the 1970s. Swann and Susan Witt, a staff member at ICE and Swann's partner, were asked in 1980 to establish a regional community land trust in the Berkshires and fell in love with the area and stayed. Swann discovered the ideas of E.F. Schumacher and became the champion of Schumacher's U.S. book tour for his work Small is Beautiful. The programs of the E.F. Schumacher Society continue at the Schumacher Center for New Economics.