Keywords
climate justicecommunity organizing
collective identity
distributed leadership
faith communities
motivation
Ethnology. Social and cultural anthropology
GN301-674
Organizational behaviour, change and effectiveness. Corporate culture
HD58.7-58.95
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Community organizing is a process for achieving social change through the mobilization of resources and the formation of collective identity. Relational community organizing is a particular approach to developing new leaders and building organizational capacity for sustaining a powerful movement, and is especially relevant in the climate justice movement because relationships serve to bring actors from isolation and despair toward communal identity and hopeful action. Minnesota Interfaith Power & Light (MNIPL) is a community organization that is using relational organizing to activate faith communities to take action on climate change. This paper describes the design and first phase of evaluation of MNIPL’s Movement Builder Program, a networked distributed leadership model that uses peer mentors to increase the efficacy of new organizers. Can a peer-to-peer network increase the leverage of organizers? Will supportive relationships move people to increased action and to develop the leadership of others? We provide an introduction to this inquiry as well as the foundational frameworks and historical context of this new approach.Date
2017-06-01Type
ArticleIdentifier
oai:doaj.org/article:2e5c9efc602a4d33b440026fc92c375910.24926/ijps.v4i2.165
2380-8969
https://doaj.org/article/2e5c9efc602a4d33b440026fc92c3759