Urban and Environmental Policy Program
COMMUNITY
ORGANIZING AND LEADERSHIP/COMMUNITY
INTERNSHIP
URBAN & ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY 310/311
Fall 2003
Tuesday/Thursday 10-11:25 a.m.
"Organizing,"
writes author Si Kahn, "is people working together to get things
done." This course focuses
primarily on community organizing
efforts by people working together to improve their neighborhoods and
cities. Community organizing can focus on a wide variety of issues
housing, the environment, public safety, public health and health care,
child care, jobs, poverty, discrimination, and many others. We will also focus
on union organizing as a compliment to community organizing.
The
purpose of the course is to help prepare you to be effective
leaders. Some of you may
want to become professional organizers, but all of you are ) and will continue
to be ) citizens in some community. If
you want to be an effective, active citizen who can make a difference in your
community, you will need to use the tools of leadership and
organization-building.
The
course examines the history of community organizing in the United States. It explores the different theories and approaches to
effective grassroots organizing. It
emphasizes the skills and techniques used to empower people so
they can win victories and improve their communities.
The
course is intended to be a small, participatory seminar.
Active student participation is critical to its success.
The course involves five ways of learning:
1.
We will read several books and a number of articles about organizing,
including several case studies, and discuss them in class.
2.
We will watch several films (including documentaries) and discuss them
in class.
3.
We will talk with several guest speakers who have experience as
effective organizers.
4.
We will participate in several hands-on exercises.
5. You will spend at least 12 hours a week working with a community organization in the L.A. area. You should already have picked one of these groups to work with during the entire term. You will attend meetings and public events, work in the office, meet the staff and members, and undertake research that will help the organization achieve its goals.
Grades
Your
grade will be based on four things:
1.
Your participation in class. Students
are expected to do the reading on time, participate in class discussions and
exercises, and complete writing assignments on time.
2.
Your participation in a community organization internship. Students are
expected to be responsible volunteers and complete the tasks assigned to you.
Each student should keep a journal about their internship
experiences. The journal will be handed in at the end of the term. To evaluate
your internship, I will discuss your work with the supervisor and with you.
3.
A short paper (15 pages) describing and analyzing your internship and
the organization you worked with. The
paper should draw on the class materials (readings, films, speakers,
exercises) as well as your experiences and your journal.
The paper should explain what you learned about community organizing
especially, and how well the organization met the criteria of effective
organizing. Some guidelines for your journal and final paper are
attached at the end. A draft of this paper is due Thursday, November
20. The final version is due
on Thursday, December 4. I
won't accept any late papers.
4.
A class project. The
entire class will select an on-campus organizing project, develop a strategy,
and carry it out.
Required
Readings
Much
of the course reading will be found in the books listed below.
In addition, all readings with an asterisk (*) will be found on the
website for this course. Go to
the Oxy library webpage, go to the electronic reserves, and find the
website for UEP 310.
Students
should also regularly bring to class articles from newspapers or magazines
that relate to the topics discussed in the course.
You
should purchase the following paperback books from the Bookstore:
Si
Kahn, Organizing: A Guide for Grassroots Leaders
Kim
Bobo, Jackie Kendall and Steve Max, Organizing for Social Change: A Manual
for Activists in the
1990s, Third Edition
Mary
Beth Rogers, Cold Anger: A Story of Faith and Power Politics
David
Reynolds, Taking the High Road: Communities Organize for Economic Change
The
following required reports and handbooks will be distributed for free in
class:
AFL-CIO,
Agents of Change: A Handbook for Student Labor Activists
Peirce
and Steinback, Corrective Capitalism
Recommended
Readings
The
following paperback books are recommended for basic reference:
Robert
Fisher, Let the People Decide: Neighborhood Organizing in America (2nd
edition)
This is the best overview of the history of community organizing. It describes various efforts and strategies to organize communities and neighborhoods in this century.
Saul
Alinsky, Rules for Radicals and Reveille for Radicals
Alinsky
was the "father" of community organizing, starting in the 1940s.
These two books are the "bibles" of organizing -- the lessons he
learned from his decades as an organizer. They are both in paperback, easy to
read, and full of great insights, most of which have stood the test of time.
Gregory
Pierce, Activism That Makes Sense: Congregations and Community Organization
This
book discusses the relationship between religious commitment and social
activism and describes the role of religious faith in community organizing.
Charlotte
Ryan, Prime Time Activism
This
book is a handbook for grassroots activists about dealing with the media.
Randy
Shaw, The Activist's Handbook
Mark
Homan, Promoting Community Change
These
are two good handbooks for community organizers about nuts-and-bolts stuff.
Mark
Warren, Dry Bones Rattling
This
is case study of effective community organizing around a variety of issues in
Texas. It is also an analysis of
how community organizing relates to the persistent crisis of American
democracy -- inequalities of power, participation, and policymaking.
Campus
Talks
In
addition to speakers I've invited to our seminar, several prominent activists
and thinkers will be speaking on campus this semester. I will let you know
about these events and encourage you to attend.
Web Sites
I
hope that all of you will become familiar with the World Wide Web as a way to
connect to the larger worlds of public policy, advocacy, and organizing. There
are thousands of web sites that deal with social issues and thousands of
advocacy organizations and political networks that have their own web sites.
Here are several key sites with which you should be familiar. I encourage you
to bookmark them so you can find them easily.
1.
Policy Action Network (http://movingideas.org) and Campaign for America=s
Future
(http://www.ourfuture.org)
-- These sites link with dozens of organizations and publications that deal
with public policy issues. They includes organizations such as the Center for Budget and
Policy Priorities, Economic Policy Institute, Public/Private Ventures, The
American Prospect magazine, Center for Law and Social Policy, and others. They
include links to issues such as economics and politics, welfare and families,
education, civic participation, and health policy.
2.
Community Organizing and Development (http://comm-org.utoledo.edu) -- This
site is a link with hundreds of groups involved in urban community
development. If you want to find out what groups are working on different
urban issues, this is the site. It also has many articles and reports on urban
community development and community organizing.
3. The Center for Neighborhood Technology (http://www.cnt.org), the National Housing Institute (www.nhi.org), the Metropolitan Initiative (http://www.cnt.org/mi/index.html), Planners Network (http://www.plannersnetwork.org), Civic Practices Network (http://www.cpn.org), and Citistates (http://www.citistates.com), and Livable Places
(http://www.livableplaces.org)
all focus on innovative research and programs that strengthen urban
neighborhoods and metropolitan areas. Each site has links to many other
resources about particular issues, programs, cities, and metropolitan areas.
4.
The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development has its own web site with
information about its programs, policies, data bases, and many links. HUD's
Office of Policy Development & Research (http://www.huduser.org) has its
own site with a great deal of information about housing and urban problems,
studies and publications, and available data. You reach can the HUD library,
with many reports and publications about cities and housing problems, at this
site.
5.
United Students Against Sweatshops (http://www.usasnet.org), Sweatshop Watch (www.sweatshopwatch.org),
Global Exchange (http://www.globalexchange.org);
and National Labor Committee (www.nlcnet.org) -- these are three of the
leading organizations working to raise awareness about and eliminate
sweatshops in the U.S. and overseas.
6.
American Prospect (http://www.prospect.org), The
Nation (http://www.thenation.com)
. These are two of the most
important magazines analyzing American politics from a progressive, grassroots
perspective
Demos
- A Network for Ideas and Action (http://www.demos‑usa.org/demos);
Center for Responsive Politics (http://www.opensecrets.org); Public
Campaign (http://www.publicampaign.org); Good Jobs First
(http://www.goodjobsfirst.org);
Center on Budget and Policy Priorities (http://www.cbpp.org);
California Budget Project (http://www.cbp.org); http://www.scanph.org);
Institute for the Study of Homelessness and Poverty in Los Angeles
http://www.weingart.org/institute); Tom Paine: Common Sense (http://www.tompaine.com)
-- These think thanks all provide interesting policy ideas on such issues as
tax policy, campaign finance, anti-poverty policy, economic development,
citizen participation, housing and homelessness, voting rights, and others
Moveon.Org:
Democracy in Action (http://www.moveon.org); Jobs with Justice (http://www.jwj.org);
AFL-CIO (http://www.aflcio.org); Union Summer
(http://www.aflcio.org/unionsummer);
Center for Community Change (http://www.communitychange.org); California Peace
Action (http://www.californiapeaceaction.org); ACORN - Association of
Community Organizations for Reform Now (http://www.acorn.org); Industrial Areas Foundation (http://www.tresser.com/IAF.htm);
Los Angeles Alliance for a New Economy (LAANE) (http://www.laane.org);
Los Angeles County Federation of Labor (http://www.launionaflcio.org);
Community Coalition (http://www.ccsapt.org);
Communities for a Better Environment (http://www.cbecal.org)
Strategic Action for a Just Economy (SAJE)
(http:// www.saje.net); Southern California Assn. for Non-Profit
Housing (SCANPH) (http://www.scanph.org);
Liberty Hill Foundation
(http://www.libertyhill.org) -- These websites from various activist organizations reflect much of the best organizing taking place around the U.S. and in L.A.
READINGS,
FILMS, SPEAKERS, AND DISCUSSION TOPICS
The
course will cover the following topics. Students should have reading
assignments completed before the class discussion on the topic.
Readings with an asterisk will found on the course website.
Economic,
Political and Social Power:
Why
Organizing Is Difficult -- And Why It Is Necessary
What
is the relationship between organizing and democracy? How do economic, social and political conditions shape what
people care about and are willing to organize around? How do the relations of power influence people's options?
What values are reflected in community organizing?
What's the connection between community organizing and solving
large-scale social problems?
Thursday,
August 28 -- Introduction
Milltown
role-play (handout in class)
Tuesday, September 2
-- Why Do We Organize?
Frederick
Douglass quote (Bobo, Organizing for Social Change, first page)
Bobo,
OSC, Ch. 2 (The Fundamentals of Direct Action Organizing)
Kahn,
Organizing, Ch. 1 (Organizing)
*Tobar,
"Housing Laws No Cure for Slums' Ills" (LA Times, July 20,
1997)
*Gold,
"A School, Factories and Plenty of Fear" (LA Times, Feb. 27,
1999)
*Rivera,
"Staples Center's Displaced Have New Homes and New
Worries" (LA Times, Oct. 9, 1999)
*Bacon-Blood,
"Plan to Burn Napalm Protested" (New Orleans Times-Picayune,
March 11, 1999)
*Greenhouse,
ABattle
Lines Drawn Over Ergonomic Rules@ (NY Times, Nov.
18, 2000)
*Greenhouse,
ABush
Plan to Avert Work Injuries Seeks Voluntary Steps By Industry@ (NY Times, April
6, 2002)
*The
Hungry Person Exercise
Thursday,
September 4 -- What Is Economic Power?
*C.
Wright Mills quote (from Mills, The Power Elite)
Bobo,
OSC, Ch. 1 (2001 Edition Introduction); Ch. 26 (You Mean
You're Not Getting Rich?)
*Sanders,
"Whither American Democracy?" (LA Times, January 16, 1994)
*Domhoff,
"Class and Power in America@ (Who Rules America? fourth edition, 2002)
*Samuelson,
"Indifferent to Inequality?" (Newsweek, May 7, 2001
*Birnbaum,
AWhere
America Shops: Wal-Mart@ (America@Work, April 2001)
Reynolds,
Taking the High Road (Introduction, Chapters 1, 4, and 5)
Tuesday,
September 9 -- What Is Political Power?
*Reich,
"The Bridgestone Tire Controversy" (from Locked in the Cabinet)
*Sifry,
"How Money in Politics Hurts You" (Dollars & Sense,
July/August 2000)
*Wilentz,
AA
Scandal for Our Time@ (American Prospect, Feb. 25, 2002)
*Mandle,
APolitics
and Corporate Greed@ (Democracy Matters, May 1, 2002)
*Huffington,
ACapitalism
Without Conscience@ (syndicated column, July 22, 2002)
*Brooks,
AEnron
and the Clintonites@ (Weekly Standard. January 1, 2002)
*Hagwood and Chen, "Quiet Revolution: Under Bush Regulatory Rollback Has a Major Impact," Wall Street Journal, Aug 3, 2001)
Thursday,
September 11 -- What Is Social Power?
*Dreier,
"The Vault Comes Out of the Shadows" (Boston Business Journal,
Oct. 10, 1983)
*Bellah,
et. al., AIndividualism@ (from Habits of the Heart)
*Callahan,
"Ballot Blocks: What Gets the Poor to the Polls? (American
Prospect, July/August 1998)
*Kretzman,
"Building Communities From the Inside Out" (Shelterforce,
Sept./Oct. 1995)
*Goodstein,
"Harnessing the Force of Faith" (Washington Post, Feb. 6,
1994)
*Verhover,
"The New Language of American Labor" (NY Times, June 26,
1999)
*Witt,
"We Rarely See Those Who Labor" (Baltimore Sun, Aug. 22,
1999)
*Cleeland,
ACorporate
Misdeeds a Benefit for Labor?@ (LA Times, July
28, 2002)
*Putnam,
"The Strange Disappearance of Civic America" (American Prospect,
December 1996)
*Schudson,
"What If Civic Life Didn't Die?" (American Prospect,
March/April 1996)
*Vallely,
"Couch-Potato Democracy?" (American Prospect, March/April
1996)
Tuesday,
September 16 -- What Can Organizing Achieve?
Reynolds,
Taking the High Road (Chapter 6)
*Dreier,
AThe
Struggle for Our Cities@ (Social Policy, Summer 1996)
*Dreier
and Piven, "Anti-Corporate Insurgency Making Itself Seen, Felt" (Boston
Globe, May 21, 2000)
*Dreyfus,
"The Turnout Imperative" (American Prospect,
July/August 1998)
Film:
ADemocratic
Promise@
Thursday,
September 18 -- What Kind of Organizing is Going on in LA?
*Leibowtiz,,
ACommittee
of One@ (Los
Angeles Magazine, June 2003)
*Cooper,
"The Two Worlds of Los Angeles" (The Nation, August 21/28,
2000)
*Candaele
and Dreier, "LA's Progressive Mosaic: Beginning to Find Its Voice" (The
Nation,
August 21/28, 2000)
*Meyerson,
ALA
Story@
(American Prospect, July 2/16, 2001)
*Murray,
"Cause That Refreshes" (LA Magazine, August 2001).
Hernandez,
"Inside Agitators: The City's Most Effective Activists," "Hall
of Fame," and "Activists
Turned
Elected Officials" (LAWeekly,October2-8, 1998) http://www.laweekly.com/ink/98/45/hernandez2.php
Meyerson,
"Introduction@ & AA
Vision for the City: :Roundtable" (LAW, March9-15,2001) http://www.laweekly.com/archives/catcont.php?catpass=features&issue=0116
Speaker:
Torie Osborn, Liberty Hill Foundation
Getting
People Involved: Mobilizing Motivation and Participation
Organizing
requires participation. Participation depends on motivating people to take the
responsibility to act -- the "iron law" of organizing. Since people
have a lot of other things to do in their lives, How do effective organizers
and leaders build organizations by getting people to actively participate? How
do they avoid the "free rider" problem? (If I can benefit from what
an organization does without having to participate, why should I participate?)
How do they find out what
motivates people? What's the difference between organizing and manipulation?
What is the difference between direct action organizing, social work,
advocacy, and community development as approaches to solving community
problems?
Tuesday,
September 23
Rogers, Cold Anger: A Story of Faith and Power Politics (entire book)
Thursday,
September 25 B
Why Do People Participate?
Kahn,
Organizing, Ch. 4 (Constituencies), Ch. 6 (Members)
Bobo,
OSC, Ch. 10 (Recruiting)
Beckwith
and Lopez, "Community Organizing: People Power from the Grassroots" (http://comm-org.utoledo.edu/papers97/beckwith.htm)
*Ballenger,
"Why People Join" (Community Jobs, April 1981)
*Reed,
"Miracle at the Grassroots" (from Politically
Incorrect, 1994)
*Anderson,
"Fresno Churchgoers Rally for Expansion of Health Insurance" (Fresno
Bee, May 4, 2000; Garrett, "Activists Rally in Sacramento for Health
Care" (Press Enterprise, May 3, 2000; Bennett, "Activists in
Capital to Rally for Uninsured" (Oakland Tribune, May 2, 2000;
Ainsworth, "Advocacy Group Transforms Everyday People in Lobbyists"
(San Diego Union-Tribune, Feb. 11, 2001)
*Zinn,
"Young Ladies Who Can Picket" (from Zinn, You Can't Be Neutral on
a Moving Train)
*Reagon,
"Songs that Moved the Movement" (Civil Rights Quarterly,
Summer 1983)
*Feingold,
"Putting Faith in Labor" (LA Times, August 28, 1998)*Pensack,
"Illinois Tenants' Union" (Shelterforce, September/October
1993)
*Stein,
"Multilingual Organizing: Balancing Participation and Access" (Third
Force, Sept/Oct 1993)
Tuesday,
September 30 -- Case Study: LA Food Security Campaign
*DiMassa
and Hayasaki, ALA Schools Set to Can Soda Sales@
(LA Times, Aug. 25, 2002)
*Hayasaki,
ASchools
to End Soda Sales@ (LA Times, Aug. 28, 2002)
Handouts
from Healthy School Food Coalition
Speaker:
Francesca De La Rosa, Center for Food & Justice; Healthy School Food
Coalition
Thursday,
October 2 -- What Keeps People Going When Things Look Bad?
*Mosle,
"How the Maids Fought Back" (New Yorker, Feb. 26 and March 4,
1996)
Film:
"One Day Longer: The Story of the Frontier Strike"
Leaders,
Followers, and Organizations
What
are the skills and roles of a good organizer? What's the difference between an
organizer and a leader? How do you find people to participate in community
organizations and actions? How do
you help people to become effective, self-confident leaders?
How do you divide up responsibilities to maximize people's involvement
and skills? How do you keep up
morale and enthusiasm among members? How
do you keep an organization together that becomes the vehicle for grassroots
"empowerment?"
Tuesday,
October 7 -- Organizers Organize Organizations
Kahn,
Organizing (Chapter 3, Organizations, Chapter 4, Money)
*Swarts,
AWhat
Makes Community Organizing Succeed?"
(Snapshots, Jan/Feb 2002)
*Shirley,
"Ysleta Elementary School" (from Shirley, Community Organizing
for Urban School Reform, 1997)
*Chavez
and Cardenas, "Group Aims to Improve Schools by Parent Power" (LA
Times, July 22, 2001)
*Cardenas,
ABuilding a Power Base for Better Education"
(LA Times, May 13, 2002)
*Rourke,
AHer Calling: To Help Others Find a Voice" (LA Times, August 12, 2002)
Speaker: Ernesto Cortes, Industrial Areas Foundation
Tuesday,
October 14 -- Organizers Find and Develop Leaders
Kahn,
Organizing, Ch. 2 (Leaders)
Bobo,
OSC, Ch. 11 (Developing Leadership)
*Hoerr,
"Solidaritas at Harvard: Organizing in a Different Voice" (American
Prospect, Summer 1993)
*Jarrat,
"The Forgotten Heroes of the Montgomery Bus Boycott" (Chicago
Tribune, December 1975)
*Cesar Chavez, "The Organizer's Tale" (Ramparts, July 1966)
Thursday,
October 16
*Firestone,
"Victory for Union At Plant in South Is Labor Milestone" (NY
Times, June 25, 1999)
*Belkin,
"Showdown at Yazoo Industries" (New York Times Magazine, Jan.
31, 1995)
Film: "Norma Rae"
Tuesday,
October 21 B
What Makes a Good Leader?
*Alinsky,
"Native Leadership" (from Reveille for Radicals)
*Von
Hoffman, "Finding and Making Leaders" (Midwest Academy, 1975)
*Freeman,
"The Tyranny of Structurelessness" (Berkeley Journal of Sociology,
1970)
*White,
"Fall From Grace" (City Limits, August/September 1994)
*Leland,
"Savior of the Streets" (Newsweek, June 1, 1998)
*Chacon,
"1,000 Work on Community at Interfaith Meeting" (Boston Globe,
March 15, 1998); "Q&A with Rev. Daniel Finn and Rev. Frank Kelley (Boston
Globe, March 22, 1998; "An Interfaith Crusade" (Boston Globe,
March 19,1998); Ebbert, "Emboldened Interfaith Group Cheered by Housing
Gains" (Boston Globe, August 12, 2000)
*Payne,
"Men Led, But Women Organized" (from West and Blumberg, eds.,Women
and Social Protest)
*Martin
Luther King, "The Drum Major Instinct" (1968)
Speaker:
Karen Bass, Community Coalition
Taking
Action: Campaigns, Strategies, and Tactics
How
do you pick the most effective way to mobilize people around
issues? How do you
design winning issue-oriented campaigns around government policy and corporate
conduct? When do you use "direct action,@
such as confrontation and civil disobedience?
How do you lobby effectively? How
do you organize an effective rally or demonstration?
How do you organize a successful public hearing? How do you run a
successful meeting? How do you
negotiate with people in power? What's the difference between winning and losing? What is the
difference between a "cop out" and a "compromise?"
Thursday,
October 23 -- Case Study: LA Housing Trust Fund Campaign
Kahn,
Organizing, Ch. 8 (Strategy), Ch. 10 (Tactics), and Ch. 15 (Coalitions)
Bobo,
OSC, Ch. 9 (Building and Joining Coalitions), Ch. 17 (Working with
Religious
Organizations)
*Breidenbach,
ALA
Story@ (Shelterforce, March/April 2002)
*Candaele
and Dreier, AHousing: An LA Story@
(Nation, April 15, 2002)
Fact
sheets on LA housing crisis (handout)
Speaker:
Jan Breidenbach, Southern CA Assn. for Nonprofit Housing
Tuesday,
October 28 -- Thinking Strategically
Bobo, OSC, Ch. 4 (Developing a Strategy), Ch. 5 (Guide to Tactics), Ch. 7 (Designing Actions),Ch. 8 (Holding Accountability Sessions)
*"A
Win for the Working Poor: The Moral Minimum Wage Campaign"
*Lassen
and Adamson, "Erasing the Red Line" (From CTWO manual)
*Sabert,
"From Moral Majority to Organized Minority: Tactics of the Religious
Right" (Christian Century, August 11-18, 1993)
*Dreier
and Glasser, "What Went Wrong: The Defeat of California's Single-Payer
Health Reform Initiative" (Social Policy, Spring l995)
*Staples,
"The Boston Model" (from Ecklein,
Community Organizers)
*Cummings
and Coogan, "Organizing Communities to Prevent the Sale of Tobacco
Products to Minors" (Quarterly of Community Health Education,
1992)
*Dreyfuss,
"Reform Gets Rolling: Campaign Finance at the Grassroots" (American
Prospect,
July/August 1999)
*Cleeland,
AFarm
Workers Urge Davis to Sign Binding Arbitration Bill@
(LA Times. August 11, 2002)
*Jones,
AHistory
Echoes As Farm Workers Rally for Bill@ (LA Times, Aug. 26, 2002)
*Hirsch,
AAhmanson
Ranch Protestors Turn Up the Heat on Sizzler Chairman@
(LA Times, Jan. 1, 2003)
*Barry
Rehfeld, "A Suite Victory for Shareholders" (Institutional
Investor, July 1998)
Thursday,
October 30
Organizing
Exercise
Labor
Unions, Labor-Community Coalitions, and Labor-Student Coalitions
What
is the history of the labor movement in the U.S.? What is the current status
of the labor movement? What are
the differences and similarities between labor organizing and community
organizing? How have labor unions sought to develop allies among religious,
community, and student groups? What are some of the key issues that unions
organize around?
Tuesday,
November 4 B The Living Wage Movement
Reynolds,
Taking the High Road (Chapters 7 and 8)
*Articles
on Baltimore "living wage" campaign ("Schmoke threatens,"
"Wage bill depends," "Wage bill OK'd," "A Living
Wage")
*Articles
on Los Angeles "living wage" campaign ("Council Approves
'Living Wage' Law for City Contracts," LAT, March 19, 1997;
"Council Overrides Veto, Oks Wage Law," LAT, April 2, 1997;
"Business Takes a Beating," LA Business Journal, March 24,
1997)
*Leovy,
"Unions Plan to Pressure Universal" (LA Times, June 30, 1998)
*Murray,
"Living Wage Comes of Age" (The Nation, July 23/30, 2001)
*Rector,
"Interview: Madeline Janis-Aparicio" (LA Times, July 26,
1998)
*Cardenas,
"She's Working Overtime for L.A.'s Living Wage Battle" (LA Times,
Aug. 21, 2000)
*Johnson,
"Activist Plays Key Role in Passage of Living-Wage Law" (LA Times,
June 4, 2001)
Articles
on Santa Monica living wage campaign (handout)
Speaker:
Madeline Janis-Aparicio, LA Alliance for a New Economy (LAANE)
Thursday,
November 6 B How
to Unions Organize?
Kahn,
Organizing, Ch. 16 (Unions)
Bobo,
OSC, Ch. 18 (Working with Local Unions) and Ch. 19 (Building
Labor-Community Partnerships)
Reynolds,
Taking the High Road (Chapters 9 and 10)
*Murray,
AOn
the Ropes@
(National Journal, March 8, 2003)
*Rohrlich, "Union's Fight with Hotel Reverberates Across LA" (LA Times, Dec. 5, 1997)
*Moberg,
AHERE
and Now@
(In These Times, August 20, 2001)
*Fine,
"Building Community Unions" (Nation, January 1, 2001)
*Leib,
"Consumers Had Role in Ending Grocery Strike" (Denver Post,
June 30, 1996)
*Greenhouse,
"Labor and Clergy Reunite to Help Society's Underdogs"
(NY Times,August 18, 1996)
*Kilborn,
"Young Organizers Lead Labor's Push" (NY Times, June 3, 1993)
*Candaele
and Dreier, "Canadian Beacon" (Nation, Dec. 16, 1996)
*Bernstein,
"All's Not Fair in Labor Wars" (Business Week, July 19, 1999)
*Bailey,
"Labor Upset Prop. 226 by Focusing on Backers" (LA Times,
June 8, 1998)
Speakers:
John Grant, United Food and Commercial Workers Union
Tuesday,
November 11 B Student-Labor Alliances and the Anti-Sweatshop Movement
Film:
AOccupied:@
Agents
of Change: A Handbook for Student Labor Activists
(handout)
*Featherstone,
"The New Student Movement" (The Nation, May 15,2000)
*Appelbaum
and Dreier, "The Campus Anti-Sweatshop Movement" (American Prospect,
September/October 1999)
*Zagier,
"Nike Makes Countermove" (Raleigh, N.C. News & Observer,
Aug. 10, 1999)
*Gourevitch,
"Awakening the Giant: How the Living Wage Movement Can Revive
Progressive Politics" (American
Prospect, May 30, 2001)
*Van
Der Werf, "How Much Should Colleges Pay Their Janitors?"(Chronicle
of Higher Education, August 3, 2001)
Wednesday,
November 12 (extra session) -- Sweatshops
Kenney,
AThe
Truth Behind the Tag@ (Cooperative Business Journal, July 2002)
Speaker:
Christina Vasquez, UNITE; Chris Mackin, CEO,
SweatX
Visit
to Team X garment factory
Identifying
Problems/Choosing Issues
How
do you learn about your community and neighborhood?
How do you identify what the
"problems" are?
What's the difference between a "problem" and an
"issue?" How do you
decide what
issues
to work on? What are
"winnable" issues? Who
are your friends and your enemies? How
do you
find
allies?
Thursday,
November 13
Bobo,
OSC, Ch. 3 (Choosing an Issue)
Kahn,
Organizing, Ch. 5 (Issues)
*Warren
and Warren, "How to Diagnose a Neighborhood" (Neighborhood
Organizer's Handbook, 1977)
Articles
on ACORN's campaigns (handout)
Speaker:
Amy Schur, ACORN
Tuesday,
November 18
*Lopez,
"Fewer Fire Inspections Conducted in Inner City" (LA Times,
Oct. 8, 1993)
*Renwick,
"Fed-Up Tenants Take Over" (LA Times, Aug, 15, 1994)
*Stein,
"Taking the MTA for a Ride" (Third Force, July/August 1995)
*Bobitaille,
"Voting Rights Activists Seek Spanish Materials" (San Jose
Mercury News, July 24, 1993)
*Mozingo, "Residents Want Action After Fatal Accident on Figueroa" (LA Times, Oct. 18, 1998)
*Monmaney,
"Cuts Hamper Anti-Smoking Bid, Study Says" (LA Times, Sept.
9, 1998)
*Holmes,
"Huge Bank Mergers Worry Consumer Groups" (NY Times, April
19,1998)
*Bustillo
and Morain, "Panel Backs Raise in State Minimum Wage" (LA Times,
Aug. 18, 2000)
*Stewart,
AHomeless
Advocates Sue LA Over Downtown Plan@ (LA Times, Aug. 21, 2002)
Issue
Exercise
Action
Research, Intelligence Gathering, and Communication
How
do grassroots organizations use information to help them win victories?
How and where do they get that information?
What's the difference between "research" and
"intelligence gathering?" How
do you do research about an issue? How
do you do research about the political, economic, and civic "power
structure?" How do you
interview people? How do grassroots organizations communicate their message? What are the different audiences for their message?
How do they get the mass media to pay attention?
Thursday,
November 20
Kahn,
Organizing, Ch. 9 (Research)
Bobo,
OSC, Ch. 20 (Tactical Investigations)
*Frammolino,
"The Bolshevik Who Beat Belmont" (LAT Magazine, January 7,
2001)
*Rosenbaum,
ALittle-Known Crusader Plays a Big Role in Tax Debate@ (New York Times,
May 21,
2001)
*Sarasohn,
ATaking Back the Initiative@ (Nation, June 18, 2001
Film:
AHERE=s Los Angeles@ (8-minute video)
Speaker:
David Koff, HERE, Local 11.
Tuesday,
November 25
Internet
Guide to Power Structure Research. Spend half an hour looking at this site:
http://darkwing.uoregon.edu/~vburris/whorules
*Hospital
campaign exercise (from CTWO manual)
*Obstetler
and Kazis, "Corporate Campaigns" (from Cohen and O'Connor,
Fighting Toxics)
*Crowther,
"How to Research Companies" (from College Placement Council)
*AFL-CIO,
Food & Allied Service Trades Dept., Manual of Corporate Investigation
*Kristof,
ACEOs
Paid 70% More...@ (LA Times, Aug. 26, 2002)
*Richman
and Kawano, "Neighborhood Information is Not Just for Experts" (Shelterforce,
Sept./October
2000)
*Vasquez,
"Sulfuric Acid Leak Exposes Ignorance" (Oakland Tribune, June
29, 1993) and "Richmond
Residents
Air Concerns" (Oakland Tribune, August 15, 1993)
*Dreier,
"Rent-a-Politician Exposed" (Shelterforce, 1981)
*Samuels
and Glantz, "The Politics of Local Tobacco Control" (Journal of
the American Medical
Association, October 16, 1991)
*Seelye,
"Lobbyists Are the Loudest in the Health Care Debate" (NY Times,
Aug. 16,1994)
Tuesday,
December 2
Bobo,
OSC, Ch. 14 (Using the Media)
Kahn,
Organizing, Ch. 12 (Communication) and Ch. 13 (Media)
*Candaele,
"Teamsters Go For Public's Heart" (LA Times, Aug. 17, 1997)
*Ryan,
"What's Newsworthy" and "Pegs, Leads, and Bites" (from
Ryan, Prime Time Activism)
*"Nonprofits and the Press: How Nonprofits Can Make the News" (Aspen Institute, June 1999)
*Deterline,"Strategic
Publicity and Media Activism" (Extra!, Sept./Oct.1997)
*Model
press advisory and model press release (from Fighting Toxics)
Wednesday,
December 3
(extra session)
*Fine,
"An Organizer's Checklist for Coalition Building" (from Brecher and
Costello, eds., Building
Bridges)
Coalition
exercise
Thursday,
December 4
Kahn,
Organizing, Ch. 17 (Politics)
*Rath,
"Grassroots: The Next Generation: BUILD and the Groups It's Inspired
Remake
Baltimore Politics from the Ground Up" (City Paper, June
15, 1999)
*Bolz,
"Can Seattle's Renters Put Judy Nicastro in the Hot Seat?" (Shelterforce,
May/June 1999)
*Feit,
"Seattle's Pragmatic Populist" (The Stranger.Com, January
25-31, 2001)
*Shearer,
"How the Progressives Won in Santa Monica" (Social Policy,
Winter 1982)
*Gills,
"Chicago Politics and Community Development" (From Clavel and Wiewel,
eds., Harold
Washington and theNeighborhoods)
*Kelleher
and Talbott, "The People Shall Rule" (Shelterforce,
Nov./December 2000)
*Simmons,
ALabor and the LEAP: Political Coalition Experiences in Connecticut@ (Working
USA, Summer 2000)
*Kest,
"Gaining Ground by Holding Back" (Shelterforce, March/April
1997)
*Dreier
and Pitcoff, "I'm a Tenant and I Vote: New Yorkers Find Victory in Rent
Struggle" (Shelterforce, July/August 1997)
*Walljasper,
"Burlington, Northern Light" (Nation, May 19, 1997)
*Dreier,
"Ray Flynn's Legacy: American Cities and the Progressive Agenda" (National
Civic Review, Fall 1993)
*Adamson,
"Clearing the Air" & "Registering for a Change"
Politics Unusual, 1996)
Speaker: Sharon Delugach, Veteran organizer, former chief-of-staff for LA City Councilperson Jackie Goldberg, and current staffperson for City Councilperson Martin Ludlow
Journal/Final
Paper
As
part of this course, you should keep a journal. Your journal should record your
internship activities. You should take notes on your observations and
impressions about the people, the organization, the community, and issues you
are dealing with. You should record your own activities -- including the
highlights and problems.
Each
student in this course is required to write a short paper (15 pages) describing
and analyzing your internship and the organization you worked with.
The paper should draw on the class materials (readings, films, speakers,
exercises) as well as your experiences and your journal.
The paper should explain what you learned about community organizing )
especially, what are the key elements of effective community organizing and how
well the organization met these criteria.
Your
final paper should aim to be objective. That means you should view the
organization from a variety of angles and perspectives -- not simply the
perspective of your supervisor. You should look at the organization from the
perspective of the staff, the board, constituents, allies, targets, and others.
Then you can come to your own conclusion based on having an
"outsider's" view of the organization. In order to write this paper,
in other words, you will need to talk to people besides your intern supervisor.
Your analysis of the organization's strengths and weaknesses should be based on
the criteria we have discussed and read about in class.
To help you think about these issues, I will put on the course website a
chapter called AGetting to Know the Placement Site@ from the book The
Successful Internship:
Transformation and Empowerment in Experiential Learning by H. Frederick
Sweitzer and Mary A. King (second edition, Thompson-Brooks/Cole Publishers,
2004). Please read this chapter
within the first two weeks of your internship.
The
final paper should include an evaluation of the organization and of your
internship. Topics should include (but aren't limited to) the following:
o
The history of the organization. How it was started and by whom? Why was it
started? How and why it has changed since its beginning? What are the
organization's missions and goals?
o
How is the organization organized? Discuss its budget, staff, board, and sources
of funds. Who runs the organization? How does the way it is organized reflected
its missions and goals? How does the way it is funded influence what it does?
o
How does the organization decide what issues to get involved with? What is the
group's overall strategy? How does it decide on strategy and tactics?
o
What is the organization's constituency? How does it determine what its
constituency is?
o
How does the organization deals with such matters as leadership, recruiting and
maintaining members, maintaining morale, fundraising, research, and the media?
o
What impact does involvement in the organization have on the people -- staff,
leaders, members?
o
Discuss how your internship fit into the organization's overall activities.
Discuss the specific role(s) you played in the organization. Evaluate the pros
and cons of your internship.
o
Discuss the overall strengths and weaknesses of the organization. Be sure to
clarify what criteria you are using.