Mobilizing the Community
Local Politics in the Era of the Global City
Edited by:
- Robert Fisher - University of Houston, Texas
- Joe Kling
Volume:
41
Series:
Urban Affairs Annual Reviews
Urban Affairs Annual Reviews
September 1993 | 368 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc
In an era of global transition, contemporary grassroots organizing represents the dominant form of resistance available to people who seek to control their lives. It is the basis for restoring public life, empowering individuals and communities, and challenging the state and the capital. Through empirically based case studies and theoretical essays, Mobilizing the Community discusses strategies, tactics, ideology, and leadership often used in grassroots mobilization. It covers citizen initiatives, ethnic self-help organizations, community-based development and service delivery programs, political lobbying and advocacy efforts, political party building, and direct action protest groups. The empowerment of various groups--middle-class suburbanites, the poor, women, gay men, lesbian women, communists, neopopulists, workers, immigrants, hispanics, and blacks--is addressed.
This comprehensive volume provides powerful suggestions to scholars, practitioners, and analysts of urban studies and political science, as well as activists.
"This is a very useful volume. Its emphasis on the process of community organizing leads to a focus on tactics, strategy, resource acquisition and alliance formation. This compliments the more usual survey studies of movement participants which tend to be static and give equal weight to each individual."
--Housing Studies
Robert Fisher and Joseph Kling
Introduction
PART ONE: HISTORICAL AND THEORETICAL CONTEXTS
Robert Fisher
Grassroots Organizing Worldwide
Joseph Kling
Complex Society/Complex Cities
Norman Fainstein and Susan S Fainstein
Participation in New York and London
PART TWO: COMMUNITY-BASED MOBILIZATIONS
Sally A Marston and George Towers
Private Spaces and the Politics of Places
Gary Delgado
Building Multiracial Alliances
Ann Withorn and Betty Mandell
Keep on Keeping On
Margit Mayer
The Career of Urban Social Movements in West Germany
Matthew Zachariah
The Silent Valley (Kerala, India) Dam Abandonment
Sonia E Alvarez
`Deepening' Democracy
PART THREE: SOCIAL MOVEMENTS AND IDENTITY POLITICS
Judith Allen
Friends and Neighbors
Valerie Lehr
The Difficulty of Leaving `Home'
Sophie Body-Gendrot
Pioneering Muslim Women in France
Barbara Epstein
The Bay Area Movement Against the Gulf War
PART FOUR: CONCLUSION
Robert Fisher and Joseph Kling
Conclusion