Organize! Building from the local for global justice

Book - 2012

"How do we organize for progressive social change in an era of unprecedented economic, social, and ecological crises? How do political activists build power and critical analysis into their daily work for change? Grounded in struggles in Canada, the USA, and Aotearoa/New Zealand, as well as transnational activist networks, Organize! links local organizing with global struggles for social justice. From organizing immigrant workers to mobilizing psychiatric survivors, from arts and activism for Palestine to support for Indigenous Peoples, activists, academics, and artists reflect on the tensions and gains inherent in a diverse range of organizing contexts and practices. Organize! encourages us to use history to shed light on contemporary... injustices and how they can be overcome."--Publisher.

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Subjects
Published
Toronto : Oakland, Calif. : Between the Lines ; PM Press c2012.
Language
English
Other Authors
Eric Shragge, 1948- (-), Jill Hanley, A. A. Choudry
Physical Description
313 p. : ill. ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781604864335
9781771130042
  • Introduction: Organize! Looking Back, Thinking Ahead
  • Activist Research: Mapping Power Relations, Informing Struggles
  • Research Partnerships and Local Community Organizing: Reflections by Evelyn Calugay
  • Fundraising: Politics and Strategies
  • Some Comments on Law and Organizing
  • Rights, Action, Change: Organize for What?
  • Escape, Retreat, Revolt: Queer People of Color, Living in Montreal Using Photovoice as a Tool for Community Organizing
  • Listen to the Music: Work the Music, Organize the Community
  • Art for Palestine: "Renarrating" History and the Present
  • Community Organizing: Maori Movement-Building
  • Solidarity, Real and Imagined: Lessons from the 1991 Postal Strike
  • Immigrant Worker Organizing in a Time of Crisis: Adapting to the New Realities of Class and Resistance
  • Prefigurative Self-Governance and Self-Organization: The Influence of Antiauthoritarian (Pro)Feminist, Radical Queer, and Antiracist Networks in Quebec
  • Making Our Space, Taking Our Place: Lessons From Migrant Women's Organizing in Montreal
  • Mad Activism Enters Its Fifth Decade: Psychiatric Survivor Organizing in Toronto
  • Organizing and the Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) Strategy: The Turn to BDS in Palestine Solidarity Politics in Montreal
  • Muhammad Ali and the Moon Migrants
  • Solidarity Tourism and International Development Internships: Some Critical Reflections
  • Moving Beyond a Politics of Solidarity toward a Practice of Decolonization
  • Organizing in Solidarity with "Threats to National Security": The Campaign against Immigration "Security Certificates"
  • Confessions of a Reluctant Food Activist
  • Building Power Beyond the Grassroots: Acorn Matters
  • Urban Neoliberalism and the Right to the City Alliance
  • Book Contributors
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Conceived as a means of demonstrating how local activist movements can collaborate with other groups to increase the effectiveness of their shared aims, both locally and globally, Choudry, Hanley, and Shragge's (Fight Back: Workplace Justice for Immigrants) earnest book succeeds mostly as a conversation about the obstacles to consensus building rather than providing clear solutions. An abundance of wonky academic writing, primarily by Canadian professors or doctoral candidates, focuses on how different social justice groups, which may share common goals, often fail to coalesce as a result of different priorities. An attempt to combine legal efforts in support of immigrants highlights the tension between differing definitions of success, while an examination of the definitions of human rights demonstrates the role that cultural misunderstanding plays in achieving global change. The book becomes more accessible when the editors allow nonacademics to have the floor. For example, performer and musician Norman Nawrocki makes a clear and concise case for incorporating performance activism into any movement. Despite its atmosphere of a sweaty consensus-building session, the book will be a valuable primer for activists looking for pitfalls to avoid. (Oct.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved