
- Paperback ISBN: 9781552664445
- Paperback Price: $24.95 CAD
- Publication Date: Aug 2011
- Rights: World
- Pages: 176
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Request Examination CopyCommunity Organizing
A Holistic Approach
Joan Kuyek
From the Introduction:
History is full of stories of the oppressed rebelling against the oppressor, only to reinstate an equally oppressive system. What we learn from oppression is how to oppress. If we want a truly transformative politics, then we must take up methods that embody the kind of world we want to create; we have to change deeply embedded beliefs and behaviours.
In this engaging and passionate book, long-time community organizer Joan Kuyek offers important insights and concrete tools to encourage people to get involved in social justice action at the community level. In Canada, activists are frustrated with their inability to effect change in the global economic system, overwhelmed by the number and complexity of issues and too often unaware or dismissive of the efforts of other activists. As a result, social forces for justice and the environment are fragmented and ineffective, and the economic elite grows more powerful. Community Organizing argues that it does not have to be this way. Suggesting that most of our attempts at change and community-building fail because we cannot get along with each other, Community Organizing starts at the community level to describe how we can work together and create organizations based on dignity and respect. It provides strategies to build movements from the community to assert democratic political power and tools to create a culture of hope in this time of despair. This book offers the means to reclaim political power in Canada.
“I have practised and taught community-based social justice leadership for 30 years. My copy of the 1990 edition of Fighting for Hope is tattered and full of sticky notes. A series of lending copies have disappeared. Now this new edition, updated to include some of the game-changing tools and events of the past twenty years, brings an important handbook back into circulation for a new generation of Canadian social justice activists. To them I say, if I had space for just one organizing manual, this would be it.”
— Anne Bishop, author of Becoming an Ally
and Beyond Token Change
Contents
Preface • Part 1 – Understanding the Context • Why This Book? • Understanding Power-Over • Part 2 – Creating a Culture of Hope • A Neighbourhood Rebuilds Itself • Transforming Our Culture • Part 3 – Learning to Work Together • Working Together • Understanding Groups and Organizations • Making Meetings Work • Research • Part 4 – Reclaiming the Economy, Healing our Relationship to the Earth • Managing the Household • Looking After Our Physical Needs • Working Lives • Paying the Bills for Social Change • Part 5 – Asserting Political Power • Fighting for Shelter in Sudbury • Organizing Campaigns • Tactics and Direct Action • Taking On the Bigger Picture • Part 6 – Lessons Learned • Fighting for Hope
About the Author
Joan Kuyek is a lifelong community organizer and activist educator. She is a gardener, grandmother, friend and lover of the outdoors.
Excerpt
Reviews
Community Organizing on Rabble.ca
Community Organizing: A Holistic Approach comes from Joan Kuyek’s perspective, informed by over 40 years of organizing. Initially intended as an update of Fighting For Hope: Organizing to Realize Our Dreams, which Kuyek wrote in 1990, it has instead become a book that reflects both the changes in the world and Kuyek’s learning over the last two decades. Kuyek’s political experience is rich and deep. It began in the 1960s, when she did research for the federal government’s Company of Young Canadians program. What she learned there quickly transformed her interest towards participatory democracy and community action. She did community organizing in Kingston, where she dedicated herself to the women’s liberation movement and was elected as a city councillor (”alderman”). Later came various organizing in Sudbury, and then national work with the United Church’s “The Church and the Economic Crisis” project and the Urban-Rural Mission with the World Council of Churches. She then went back to Sudbury to work as the founding program coordinator of the Better Beginnings Better Futures community development program, followed by a year with the national Urban Issues Program of the Bronfman Foundation. She then helped found MiningWatch Canada, where she stayed for ten years.
Community Organizing: A Holistic Approach is indeed holistic and comprehensive. Kuyek examines the creation of positive social change based on a coherent and wide-ranging analysis of the context in which the work is done and the principles needed to make it effective. Her concept of a holistic approach draws on Aboriginal ‘medicine wheel’ philosophy, in an effort to bring balance to the various aspects of organizing. She notes, “whole chunks of experience and information are often missing from our work.” She uses stories from her own history of involvement to illustrate the holistic approach, which add much to the principles and analysis contained in the book.
Perhaps the most important part of the book is her perspective on starting points for effecting real change-by which she means changing the societal systems that perpetuate problems, and not just winning piecemeal victories. It is not, as she would have argued earlier in her life, on environmental, social or political questions that we must begin our organizing. Instead, she offers a gardening analogy, of creating fertile soil from which good things can grow. We need to begin with our own lives and those closest around us. We must generate enthusiasm in those who are willing to get involved, so that they will stay involved and enjoy doing so. This must be so, because we are asking a lot of people: “Asking ourselves and others to take on the work of confronting these systems of domination is asking people to take on a dangerous and difficult task.”
Kuyek finds hope and inspiration in First Nations communities, where the maintenance of traditional ways of life has gone hand in hand with improvements in social, political and economic life. Having outlined the many problems with our current culture, she finds it necessary for non-Indigenous people, too, to undertake a radical transformation of our cultures and communities.
And along with this type of coherent vision, she provides many principles and tools: a list of conditions for how to create safe learning environments, “the web of influences” exercise, questions for visioning exercises, activist theatre, media resources, and more. This book is really a toolbox, a strategy-box, and a vision-box, all in one.
Kuyek clearly illustrates how we can either meet or fail the challenge of class or race, and its impact on our organizing. She’s also able to communicate a valuable understanding of subtleties in discussions on different aspects of power and economics, both of which are often insufficiently or problematically discussed or investigated in activist efforts.
Kuyek has much wisdom to share: frankly acknowledging the problems of fragmentation and disunity in organizing; explaining why developing a sense of “we” based on vision and values is better than organizing based on defining “enemies”; and learning to welcome how synchronicity seems to play a supportive role whenever we’re doing the right work.
For someone interested in getting involved in organizing, this book can serve as a comprehensive and inspiring introduction. For those already committed to this work, it is a valuable resource for reflection and guidance.
—Greg Macdougall
—Rabble.ca, Dec. 2, 2011
Community Organizing in Briarpatch
Those of us who are active in our communities, whether dealing with issues like homelessness or fundraising for a high school basketball team, have much to learn from the thoughts and insights of Joan Kuyek, whose experiences as a community organizer span some 30 years. Joan Kuyek began her life work as a Company of Young Canadians (CYC) researcher in Ontario, where she first learned about community development. With the Student Union for Peace Action in Kingston, she was involved in the Kingston Community Project, organizing tenants and a food co-op. When she later moved to Sudbury, Kuyek immersed herself in community development, union organizing and mining activism. This led her to be part of the formation of Mining Watch Canada. Throughout all of this, Kuyek took part-time jobs to cover the expenses of her organizing, including work for the World Council of Churches, the Sudbury Better Beginnings Better Futures program, and the Samuel and Saidye Bronfman Foundation.
Kuyek’s organizing experience ranges from the protracted Inco strikes in Sudbury of 1978-79 to the individual actions at the North Eastern Ontario Women’s Conference. But in Community Organizing, Kuyek goes beyond the basics of telling her story to explain some of the underpinnings of the fight and her understanding of power, as well as an assessment of some of the bigger pictures and how they influence our local actions. Her knowledge of how to work though the planning steps of community organizing provides readers, from relative neophytes to seasoned activists, with a valuable template. Her story of the North Eastern Ontario Women’s Conferences, for example, shows how two separate and important groups of individuals, Aboriginal and Euro-Canadian women, can work together and develop a common understanding of women’s issues.
Kuyek calls for holistic organizing. People come to be involved in change for many reasons. If we want change, we have to be open and listen to others. We need to build community by choosing the causes we want to work on. If the problems are more systemic, as one might say of today, then the movement must be broadened and more inclusive, and defined by the common good, rather than for one group of people. When we tell the truth, develop a vision of tomorrow, and work towards that vision, all is possible. The current system is created by our labour, and depends on our consent.
Kuyek’s perspectives on Canadian culture are interwoven through her stories and experiences. Her affirmation of the anguish and frustration of not getting things moving or changed easily assures us that we are never cycling alone, so to speak. It is also heartening to hear of successes and victories, and to know that the next time you hit the road, while the hills will be there, and perhaps the Rocky Mountains, you will get over them, and the ride down the other side will be energizing, restorative and worth all the blood, sweat and pain put into the fight.
Jim Elliott is a life-long activist in community development and the environment living in Regina
—Dec. 1, 2011. Briarpatch Magazine