Training for Change. George Lakey, director; Daniel Hunter, program director.  Helping groups stand up for justice, peace, and the environment through strategic non-violence.

border border border border
border border
 Home
 About Us
 Workshops
 Publications
 Articles
 Field Reports
 Books & Manuals
 TFC News Archive
 Tools
 People
 Links
 Site Map
 - - - - - - -

Login Form
Username
Password
Remember me    
Forgotten your password?
Want more tools and handouts? If you are a graduate of a TFC workshop: Create an account

Related Items

Tools

Workshops

Articles & Reports

Books & Manuals

border
border border border border
border border

Glossary of
direct education
terminology
sociogram: an exercise in which participants arrange their bodies to show something about themselves or to stimulate a new awareness. For example, participants are asked to range themselves along a line that shows how long they've been active with a particular cause. See also "spectrum."
Read more...

1744198 Visitors

border
border
Home arrow Publications arrow Articles arrow Mass Action Since Seattle: 7 ways to make our protests more powerful


Mass Action Since Seattle: 7 ways to make our protests more powerful   PDF  Print  E-mail 
JUMP TO:
Mass Action Since Seattle: 7 ways to make our protests more powerful
1. Create more dilemma demonstrations
2. Decide who to influence
3. Use campaigns
4. Understand mass media
5. Create a contrast with police behavior
6. Take a powerful attitude against repression
7. Commit to strategic nonviolent action
Conclusion
Footnotes
Page 3 of 10
2. Decide specifically whom we're trying to influence.

Using a term like "the public" is too simple a way to think about strategy (even though I just referred to the public in the previous section). "The public" includes many subgroups, some of whom are very important to the success of a campaign, some less important, and some not important at all. If we create a map of the political territory and decide who we most need to influence in what ways, we will create tactics that more frequently have the force that's needed.

For example, a small group in the Movement for a New Society once threw a monkey wrench into a U.S. foreign policy objective by correctly figuring out who to influence through direct action. The U.S. was supporting, as it often does, a military dictatorship that was killing thousands of people. In fact, in Pakistani dictator Yayah Khan was killing hundreds of thousands of people in East Bengal who wanted independence. The U.S. government lied about its support, but the activists learned that Pakistani ships were on their way to U.S. ports to pick up military supplies for the continuing massacre. The group also realized that if longshoremen refused to load the ships, the U.S. government would be foiled.

The problem was, the East Coast longshoremen were, if anything, politically inclined to support the government, and wanted to feed their families. The activists repeatedly tried to persuade the longshoremen to act in solidarity with the East Bengalis, without success. It was time for direct action. The group announced a blockade of the port which was expecting the next Pakistani freighter, and began practicing "naval maneuvers" with sailboats, rowboats and the rest of its motley fleet. The media gave ongoing coverage, and longshoremen witnessed on television as well as in person the strange antics of protesters who seemed to believe they could stop a big freighter with tiny boats. The tactic raised the longshoremen's motivation to listen and discuss, and they agreed that, if the activists created a picket line, the longshoremen would refuse to cross it!

When the campaign succeeded in that city, the activists took it to other port cities and finally the International Longshoremen's union agreed workers would not load Pakistan-bound weapons anywhere in the U.S.! The blockade, initiated by a small group, succeeded because the group crafted direct action tactics specifically geared toward the part of the public that most needed to be influenced. (1)

As we design campaigns focused on the World Trade Organization or capital punishment or the sex trade we need to create a political/cultural/economic map of "the public" and decide who we want to influence in what ways. Part of our power is in fact through making such choices.





go to top Go to Top go to top
powered by mambo open source
border
border
  
ABOUT US

[United Steelworkers]

Training for Change has led hundreds of workshops for activists around the world, including crowd control workshops for Mohawks, strategy retreats for Greenpeace, and civil disobedience classes for ACT-UP. Read more about TFC and its work.

Above: George Lakey leading strike training for the United Steelworkers.

 
MAKE A DONATION

Join us for the long-term success of social movements!

Donate On-Line

You can also send a check to: Training for Change
3241 Columbus Avenue
Minneapolis, MN 55407

 


 
Training for Change     3241 Columbus Avenue, South Minneapolis, MN 55407 USA     peacelearn@igc.org     ph:612-827-7323