UAEM National Conference CAMPUS ACTIVISM TRAINING November 14-15, 2009 Sarah Frazer, Americans for...

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UAEM National Conference CAMPUS ACTIVISM TRAINING November 14-15, 2009 Sarah Frazer, Americans for Informed Democracy

Transcript of UAEM National Conference CAMPUS ACTIVISM TRAINING November 14-15, 2009 Sarah Frazer, Americans for...

Page 1: UAEM National Conference CAMPUS ACTIVISM TRAINING November 14-15, 2009 Sarah Frazer, Americans for Informed Democracy.

UAEM National ConferenceCAMPUS ACTIVISM

TRAININGNovember 14-15, 2009

Sarah Frazer, Americans for Informed Democracy

Page 2: UAEM National Conference CAMPUS ACTIVISM TRAINING November 14-15, 2009 Sarah Frazer, Americans for Informed Democracy.

Objective of workshop

Develop a strategic framework for successful direct action campaigns.

Familiarize ourselves with the range of tactics at our disposal, when, why and how to use them.

Page 3: UAEM National Conference CAMPUS ACTIVISM TRAINING November 14-15, 2009 Sarah Frazer, Americans for Informed Democracy.

Four Ways to Solve Social Problems

Direct Service

Advocacy

-Marshall Ganz, Harvard Kennedy School of Government

Mobilization

Organizing

Page 4: UAEM National Conference CAMPUS ACTIVISM TRAINING November 14-15, 2009 Sarah Frazer, Americans for Informed Democracy.

1. Direct Service

Improves the lives of people by directly linking them to resources that stabilize daily life. Direct service alleviates immediate crises by but often leaves the root causes of problems untouched.

Page 5: UAEM National Conference CAMPUS ACTIVISM TRAINING November 14-15, 2009 Sarah Frazer, Americans for Informed Democracy.

2. AdvocacyInterprets institutional processes for the poor and disadvantaged. It does not address nor change the basic power relationships between people and the institutions that control their lives.

Page 6: UAEM National Conference CAMPUS ACTIVISM TRAINING November 14-15, 2009 Sarah Frazer, Americans for Informed Democracy.

3. Mobilization

Engages people in short-term, direct action to create immediate results

Page 7: UAEM National Conference CAMPUS ACTIVISM TRAINING November 14-15, 2009 Sarah Frazer, Americans for Informed Democracy.

4. OrganizingIs people working together to get things done. It serves as a tool, a weapon, and a means of getting people to learn, to think, to act and to reflect about theirs lives in a new way. By doing so, the poor and disadvantaged areable to reclaim their strengths, roots and heritage.

Page 8: UAEM National Conference CAMPUS ACTIVISM TRAINING November 14-15, 2009 Sarah Frazer, Americans for Informed Democracy.

3 Principles of Direct Action Organizing

Win concrete improvements in people’s lives

Give people a sense of their own power

Alter the relations of power

-Midwest Academy

Page 9: UAEM National Conference CAMPUS ACTIVISM TRAINING November 14-15, 2009 Sarah Frazer, Americans for Informed Democracy.

Strategic Campaign Planning

Campaign:– Strategic series of coordinated and

escalating activities designed to achieve a specific goal

Strategy:– A plan to organize your Folks and your

Friends to force the Man to give you the Goods.

-Ruckus Society

Page 10: UAEM National Conference CAMPUS ACTIVISM TRAINING November 14-15, 2009 Sarah Frazer, Americans for Informed Democracy.

6 Stages of a CampaignInvestigate/gather informationEducateIncrease motivation and personal commitment for the struggle aheadNegotiate with targetDirect actionCreate new relationship with opponent that reflects new power reality

-Ruckus Society, derived from MLK’s essay “Letter from Birmingham Jail”

Page 11: UAEM National Conference CAMPUS ACTIVISM TRAINING November 14-15, 2009 Sarah Frazer, Americans for Informed Democracy.

What is Direct Action?

People organizing ourselves to make the changes we want to see in the world

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3 Arguments Against Direct Action

It’s ineffective

It’s un-American

It’s illegal

Page 13: UAEM National Conference CAMPUS ACTIVISM TRAINING November 14-15, 2009 Sarah Frazer, Americans for Informed Democracy.

Martin Luther King, Jr.

“We who engage in nonviolent direct action are not the creators of tension. We merely bring to the surface the hidden tension that is already alive.”

Page 14: UAEM National Conference CAMPUS ACTIVISM TRAINING November 14-15, 2009 Sarah Frazer, Americans for Informed Democracy.

Good NVDA Can:Be fun!Alert folks to a problem, issue or idea.Assert or defend a human or ecological right. Directly stop bad things from happening.Amplify our voices, magnify our visibility.Create & envision solutions.Inspire, recruit and energize.Lead us to the achievement of our goals.

Page 15: UAEM National Conference CAMPUS ACTIVISM TRAINING November 14-15, 2009 Sarah Frazer, Americans for Informed Democracy.

Types of NVDAProtest– Registering your dissent

Non-cooperation– Withdrawing something from the system

Intervention– Directly intervening in the functioning of the system

Creative solutions– Developing alternative, community-based solutions

Page 16: UAEM National Conference CAMPUS ACTIVISM TRAINING November 14-15, 2009 Sarah Frazer, Americans for Informed Democracy.

Points of Intervention

Point of productionPoint of destruction

Point of consumptionPoint of decision

Point of assumption

Page 17: UAEM National Conference CAMPUS ACTIVISM TRAINING November 14-15, 2009 Sarah Frazer, Americans for Informed Democracy.

Point of Production

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Point of Destruction

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Point of Consumption

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Point of Decision

Page 21: UAEM National Conference CAMPUS ACTIVISM TRAINING November 14-15, 2009 Sarah Frazer, Americans for Informed Democracy.

Point of Assumption

Page 22: UAEM National Conference CAMPUS ACTIVISM TRAINING November 14-15, 2009 Sarah Frazer, Americans for Informed Democracy.

Georgetown Living Wage Coalition

Hunger Strike

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UVA Living Wage Campaign

Sit-in

Page 24: UAEM National Conference CAMPUS ACTIVISM TRAINING November 14-15, 2009 Sarah Frazer, Americans for Informed Democracy.

MIT STAND Divestment Campaign

Die-in

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MIT STAND Divestment Campaign

Demonstration

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United Students Against Sweatshops

Banner drop

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Let’s Talk Tactics

What other tactics have you seen, heard or or participated in that have successfully escalated or won a campaign?

Page 28: UAEM National Conference CAMPUS ACTIVISM TRAINING November 14-15, 2009 Sarah Frazer, Americans for Informed Democracy.

Break Out Session!

Move quickly to your letter15-20 minutes to complete scenarioConsider your tactics carefullyAppoint someone to report back

Page 29: UAEM National Conference CAMPUS ACTIVISM TRAINING November 14-15, 2009 Sarah Frazer, Americans for Informed Democracy.

6 Stages of a CampaignInvestigate/gather informationEducateIncrease motivation and personal commitment for the struggle aheadNegotiate with targetDirect actionCreate new relationship with opponent that reflects new power reality

-Ruckus Society, derived from MLK’s essay “Letter from Birmingham Jail”

Page 30: UAEM National Conference CAMPUS ACTIVISM TRAINING November 14-15, 2009 Sarah Frazer, Americans for Informed Democracy.

The Tactic Star

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Action Development

Develop a Sense of TimingBe CreativeKISS Rule

Page 32: UAEM National Conference CAMPUS ACTIVISM TRAINING November 14-15, 2009 Sarah Frazer, Americans for Informed Democracy.

What Kind of Power We Got?

End of formal slavery Outlawed child labor/The right to go to schoolVoting rights for women, youth (over 18), African Americans The 40 hour work week (and weekends)Civil RightsMaternity leaveThe rights of people with disabilities to hold jobs and access businesses

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People POWER

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“Power concedes nothing without demand [...] The limits of tyranny are prescribed by the endurance of those whom they oppress.”

– Frederick Douglass, American abolitionist and women’s suffragist

“Let us realize the arc of the moral universe is long but it bends toward justice.”

– Martin Luther King, Jr., Americans civil rights leader

“Walk the street with us into history. Get off the sidewalk.”– Dolores Huerta, United Farm Workers of America co-founder and organizer

"When I give food to the poor, they call me a saint. When I ask why the poor have no food, they call me a Communist.”

– Dom Helder Camara, Brazilian Archbishop and liberation theologist

If you’re not angry, you’re not paying attention.

Food for Thought

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Super Hero Shout Out

Page 36: UAEM National Conference CAMPUS ACTIVISM TRAINING November 14-15, 2009 Sarah Frazer, Americans for Informed Democracy.

Sarah Frazer, Americans for Informed Democracy– [email protected]– www.aidemocracy.org

US Social Forum– June 22-26, 2010, Detroit, MI– www.ussf2010.org

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Workshop Evaluation

Rate the workshop1-5 (5 = highest; 1 = lowest)What you liked or befitted from the most?What you liked the least and could stand to be improved?