A collection of quotes to be used as part of training on strategic nonviolence and nonviolent direct action.
A collection of quotes to be used as part of training on strategic nonviolence and nonviolent direct action.
The games in this handout are separated into the categories of introductory games, name games, dynamicas (energisers) and fun ways to get people into groups.
This is a training process guide to explore different approaches to solving community problems, investigate how different problems require different approaches to change to solve them, clarify the differences between community organising, community development, advocacy and service delivery.
Joel Dignam reviews Jane McAlevey’s No Shortcuts: Organising for Power in the Gilded Age. McAlevey outlines a critique of most contemporary union campaigning, using case studies and other analysis to argue for a deeper more rigorous approach to organising.
Tectonica has compiled a comprehensive reading list on AI’s impact on politics, campaigning, and advocacy.
With the global rise of authoritarianism, civil society is experiencing an unprecedented crack down. Lessons from organizing against repression in Florida, Brazil, and Nicaragua.
Examples and lessons from 350.org of different ways Movement Support Teams can work. Movement Support Teams are peer-to-peer learning.
See what’s new in the Commons Social Change Library – making activism smarter and stronger.
A collection of resources to explore protests – why protest, do protests work, how to stay safe, how to organise a protest, etc.
A study of 44 dilemma actions over the last 90 years examines the many benefits of creative protests for social movements.
A collection of quotes to be used as part of training on strategic nonviolence and nonviolent direct action.
The games in this handout are separated into the categories of introductory games, name games, dynamicas (energisers) and fun ways to get people into groups.
This is a training process guide to explore different approaches to solving community problems, investigate how different problems require different approaches to change to solve them, clarify the differences between community organising, community development, advocacy and service delivery.
Joel Dignam reviews Jane McAlevey’s No Shortcuts: Organising for Power in the Gilded Age. McAlevey outlines a critique of most contemporary union campaigning, using case studies and other analysis to argue for a deeper more rigorous approach to organising.
Tectonica has compiled a comprehensive reading list on AI’s impact on politics, campaigning, and advocacy.
With the global rise of authoritarianism, civil society is experiencing an unprecedented crack down. Lessons from organizing against repression in Florida, Brazil, and Nicaragua.
Examples and lessons from 350.org of different ways Movement Support Teams can work. Movement Support Teams are peer-to-peer learning.
See what’s new in the Commons Social Change Library – making activism smarter and stronger.
A collection of resources to explore protests – why protest, do protests work, how to stay safe, how to organise a protest, etc.
A study of 44 dilemma actions over the last 90 years examines the many benefits of creative protests for social movements.