![Workbook cover - Title reads 'Right-Sized Belonging: Six Practices For Organizers'. A dark forest green quilt with 8 colorful earth-tone patches assembled around the center. The center of the quilt is an overhead of a light-skinned southeast asian person with dark brown hair sewing using a white sewing machine. Around them are 8 patches they have quilted, symbolizing concepts and skills of “nested belonging”, “right-sized belonging”, “anchoring your purpose”, “approaching problems with collective governance”, “setting boundaries & expectations”, “understanding trauma & build emotional skill”, “increasing conflict resilience”, and “connecting to a broader movement ecosystem” (in length descriptions below for each quilt patch). The edges of the quilt are embellished with thin eggshell threading of different fractals found in nature, including in spiderwebs, mountain formations, dandelions, butterflies, solar systems, and snowflakes. How natural belonging is if we look at its evidence in patterns of nature!](https://i0.wp.com/commonslibrary.org/wp-content/uploads/Right-Sized-Belonging-Six-Practices-For-Organizers.png?fit=230%2C300&ssl=1)
Right-Sized Belonging: Six Practices For Organizers
A website and toolkit of 6 suggested practices for organizers and organizations to implement in their own spaces to create belonging.
A website and toolkit of 6 suggested practices for organizers and organizations to implement in their own spaces to create belonging.
A set of principles and practices that can root out inequality and exclusion while helping us turn toward, rather than against, each other.
Videos and overviews of group norms and social identity within the context of understanding conflict between groups.
This guide is a powerful tool for anyone looking to deepen their understanding of belonging and cultivate practices that promote connection, empathy, and community.
How people can find a place within social movements where they comfortable, effective & supported, & how organisers can help them to feel so.
This book chapter by Aidan Ricketts is about the key moments and positive sides of the old forest growth campaign in northern NSW in the 1990s.