People power : the community organizing tradition of Saul Alinsky /

"People Power is about how people can effectively organize to pursue justice, what power structures do in response to organizing, and how to beat the powers that be. Providing a vibrant story of many different organizers and organizations, its lessons are essential if we are to restore American...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Miller, Mike, 1937-, Schutz, Aaron
Format: Electronic eBook
Language:English
Published: Nashville : Vanderbilt University Press, 2014.
Subjects:
Online Access:CONNECT
Table of Contents:
  • Cover; Title Page; Contents; Acknowledgments; Preface: Why Is Alinsky Important Today?; Part I: Introduction; 1. Editors' Introduction; 2. Saul Alinsky and His Core Concepts; 3. What Is an Organizer? (1973); Part II: Alinsky's Colleagues; Section A. Nicholas von Hoffman: The Woodlawn Organization and the Civil Rights Movement in the North; 4. An Introduction to Nicholas von Hoffman; 5. The Woodlawn Organization: Assorted Essays (1961-1969); 6. Questions and Answers (1959); 7. Finding and Making Leaders (1963); Section B. Fred Ross: Organizing Mexican Americans in the West
  • 8. Fred Ross and the House-Meeting Approach9. Cesar Chavez and the Fate of Farmworker Organizing; 10. Dolores Huerta and Gil Padilla; Section C. Tom Gaudette and His Legacy; 11. Tom Gaudette: An Oral History; 12. Shel Trapp and Gale Cincotta; 13. What Every Community Organization Should Know about Community Development (1975); 14. John Baumann and the PICO National Network; Section D. Dick Harmon; 15. An Introduction to Dick Harmon; 16. Making an Offer We Can't Refuse (1973); Section E. Ed Chambers and the Industrial Areas Foundation (IAF)
  • 17. Ed Chambers: The IAF Institute and the Post-Alinsky IAF18. Organizing for Family and Congregation (1978); 19. Relationship and Power: An Interview with Ernesto Cortes Jr. (1993); 20. A Call for Organizing, Confrontation, and Community Building (1995); 21. Standing for the Whole (1990); Part III: Different Directions; Section A. Heather Booth, Midwest Academy, and Citizen Action; 22. An Introduction to Heather Booth, the Midwest Academy, and Citizen Action; 23. Direct Action Organizing: A Handbook for Women: Chapter 1 (1974)
  • Section B. Wade Rathke and Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN)24. An Introduction to Wade Rathke and ACORN; 25. ACORN Community Organizing Model (1973); 26. The Story of an ACORN Organizer: Madeline Talbott; Part IV: Concluding Commentaries; 27. The State of Organizing; 28. Thinking beyond the Present; Index