Dry Bones Rattling: Community Building to Revitalize American Democracy
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Dry Bones Rattling offers the first in-depth treatment of how to rebuild the social capital of America's communities while promoting racially inclusive, democratic participation. The Industrial Areas Foundation (IAF) network in Texas and the Southwest is gaining national attention as a model for reviving democratic life in the inner city--and beyond. This richly drawn study shows how the IAF network works with religious congregations and other community-based institutions to cultivate the participation and leadership of Americans most left out of our elite-centered politics. Interfaith leaders from poor communities of color collaborate with those from more affluent communities to build organizations with the power to construct affordable housing, create job-training programs, improve schools, expand public services, and increase neighborhood safety.
In clear and accessible prose, Mark Warren argues that the key to revitalizing democracy lies in connecting politics to community institutions and the values that sustain them. By doing so, the IAF network builds an organized, multiracial constituency with the power to advance desperately needed social policies. While Americans are most aware of the religious right, Warren documents the growth of progressive faith-based politics in America. He offers a realistic yet hopeful account of how this rising trend can transform the lives of people in our most troubled neighborhoods. Drawing upon six years of original fieldwork, Dry Bones Rattling proposes new answers to the problems of American democracy, community life, race relations, and the urban crisis.
Mark R. Warren
Mark R. Warren is Associate Professor in the School of Education at Harvard University.
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Dry Bones Rattling - Mark R. Warren
DRY BONES RATTLING
PRINCETON STUDIES IN AMERICAN POLITICS:
HISTORICAL, INTERNATIONAL, AND COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES
SERIES EDITORS
Ira Katznelson, Martin Shefter, Theda Skocpol
A list of titles
in this series appears
at the back of
the book
DRY BONES RATTLING
COMMUNITY BUILDING TO
REVITALIZE AMERICAN DEMOCRACY
Mark R. Warren
Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University Press
Published by Princeton University Press, 41 William Street,
Princeton, New Jersey 08540
In the United Kingdom: Princeton University Press,
3 Market Place, Woodstock, Oxfordshire OX20 1SY
All Rights Reserved
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Portions of chapter 6 appeared in "Beyond Tocqueville: Civil
Society and Social Capital in Comparative Perspective," in American
Behavioral Scientist 42 (September 1998), edited by Bob Edwards
and Michael W. Foley, copyright © 1998 by Sage Publications, Inc.
Warren, Mark R., 1955–
Dry bones rattling : community building to revitalize
American democracy / Mark R. Warren.
p. cm. — (Princeton studies in American politics)
Includes index.
ISBN 0-691-07431-3 (alk. paper) —
ISBN 0-691-07432-1 (pbk. : alk. paper)
1. Community organization—Texas. 2. Community development,
Urban—Texas. 3. Community organization—Southwestern States.
4. Community development, Urban—Southwestern States.
5. Industrial Areas Foundation. I. Title. II. Series.
HT176.T4 E37 2001
307′.09764—dc21 00-061147
Photo credits: Figure 1 used with permission,
© San Antonio Express-News. Figures 2–13, Alan Pogue,
Texas Center for Documentary Photography.
This book has been composed in Sabon.
Printed on acid-free paper. ∞
ISBN-13: 978-0-691-07432-0 (pbk.)
www.pup.princeton.edu
Printed in the United States of America
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
10 9 8 7 6
(Pbk.)
To Roberta
WITH LOVE AND APPRECIATION,
and to Folasade and Imoh
WITH HOPE FOR A BETTER FUTURE
Contents
Preface
Introduction: Dry Bones Rattling
1. Community Building and Political Renewal
2. A Theology of Organizing: From Alinsky to the Modern IAF
3. Beyond Local Organizing: Statewide Power and a Regional Network
4. Bridging Communities across Racial Lines
5. Deepening Multiracial Collaboration
6. Effective Power: Campaigning for Community-Based Policy Initiatives
7. Congregational Bases for Political Action
8. Leadership Development: Participation and Authority in Consensual Democracies
9. Conclusion: Restoring Faith in Politics
Notes
Index
Preface
AT THE very time that democracy appears to have triumphed on the world stage, it faces a profound crisis at home in America. Many Americans have simply lost faith in the ability of traditional forms of democratic politics to address the most critical questions facing their families and communities. In response to our democratic malaise, Americans across the political spectrum have been looking for ways to revitalize American politics. But gains seem hard to come by. If we could just make it easier to register to vote, some argue, then more people will go to the polls. If our parties would just develop a platform that spoke to the interests of working Americans, others say, then they would gain people’s support. If we could just find the right issue, then people would swing into action. But liberalized registration laws, and the constant search for better party platforms and important issues, never seem to result in engaging Americans very broadly, particularly those most often excluded in low-income communities of color.
I started this study out of frustration with our current understanding of how to revive American politics. While volumes have been written about the causes for lack of participation, there were surprisingly few studies of promising new models for democratic action. I decided to study an effort that appeared to be having a significant degree of success. I chose to study the work of the Industrial Areas Foundation (IAF) in Texas and the Southwest because, from what I had heard or read, the network involved indigenous community leaders in a type of political action that appeared to be making a real difference for inner-city communities.
In the IAF I found a group of committed people of faith striving to forge a new way to conduct politics, one that reached deeply into communities to address the heartfelt concerns of families struggling to raise their children. The network has found a way to engage the kind of person so often left out of elite-dominated politics, particularly Hispanic¹ and African American women active in the daily life of their churches and communities. Moreover, the network brought together Hispanic, black, and white residents to cooperate on issues that affect their communities, a relatively rare phenomenon in American politics.
I found that the leaders of IAF organizations were active in a rich array of community building and political activities, forging ties with their neighbors, conducting research, developing their own programmatic initiatives, and leading political battles to launch them. The IAF appeared to engage the energy and commitment of people to improve their communities, an energy that appears to be growing in America even as traditional forms of political involvement decline. Rather than start at the top with the right
issue or party platform, the IAF was working to reconstruct politics by infusing it with ideas, commitments, and strength at the bottom.
Just as I began my research on the IAF network, Robert Putnam published the results of his study of governance in Italy. Normally, a study of regional government effectiveness in Italy might be thought to hold little bearing on the problems of American democracy. Yet I found in this study an important starting point for understanding the organizing work of the Texas IAF. In his book on Italy, Putnam argues that social capital provided the key to making democracy work.
Social capital refers to features of social organization such as networks, norms, and social trust that facilitate coordination and cooperation for mutual benefit.
Putnam shows that Italian communities rich in trust and cooperative associations have more effective government and even healthier economic development compared to those with low levels of such social capital.² Applying the concept to the United States, I began to consider the IAF’s strategy as an effort to make democracy work
by engaging people in politics through their participation in the stable institutions of community life, especially religious congregations.
I became determined to identify the lessons that could be learned from the interfaith network for those who care about revitalizing democracy and rebuilding our most troubled communities. The main lesson to be learned is simple: a key to renewing American politics is to rebuild its foundations in the values and institutions that sustain community. How to do that, in a way that is broadly inclusive and brings effective power to community action, is a more complicated matter. That is what this book is about.
My experiences studying the IAF and writing this book have made me more hopeful about American civic and political life. I see the possibilities and rewards of value-based politics, of multiracial collaboration, of patient relationship building in local communities. But I also see the challenges ahead, if community-building efforts like the IAF are to become a serious national force for political renewal. I hope that this book will take us a step closer to that goal.
In order to write Dry Bones Rattling, I have had to draw upon the support and assistance of my community—my family, friends and colleagues. First of all, I would like to thank all of the leaders and organizers of the Southwest Industrial Areas Foundation who agreed to share their life’s work with me, and help me to understand it. Ernie Cortes made the project possible in the first place by approving my study of the Texas network and opening doors throughout the state for me. He has taught me a great deal about politics and about human character. Pearl Ceasar and Perry Perkins hosted my more lengthy stays in San Antonio and Fort Worth, while Christine Stephens, Maribeth Larkin, Joe Higgs, Robert Rivera, Mignonne Konecny, and Tim McCluskey welcomed me for shorter visits to other IAF organizations. Frank Pierson, Consuelo Tovar, Joe Rubio, Willie Bennett, Lady Coleman Byrd, Tom Holler, Elizabeth Valdez, Julia Lerma, Carole Patterson and many others spent hours helping me to gain a better understanding of the IAF’s organizing.
Meanwhile, scores of IAF leaders agreed to answer my seemingly endless string of questions. Patricia Ozuna, Virginia Ramirez, Andres Sarabia, Homer Bain, Terry Boggs, Gerald Britt, Tony Fleo and many others did more, talking at length with me, keeping tabs on my research over time, and welcoming me to their homes or churches. Carrie Laughlin, Patty Penorio, Steve Jackobs and Del Watson at the Texas network office in Austin helped inform and coordinate my efforts. And several individuals provided crucial assistance by letting me stay in their homes or parishes. These generous hosts include Carole Patterson and Brett Campbell, Father Jim Janish, Steve Jackobs and Betty Weed, Carrie Laughlin, Angela Flounory, Louisa Meacham, Tony Fleo and the brothers of the Society of Mary at St. Mary of the Assumption in Fort Worth. Jack Salvadore, Cliff Borofsky, and other staff at Project QUEST were always happy to provide the latest information on the progress of their job-training program.
In conducting this project, I have been committed to discussing the results of my research and analysis with IAF participants. Ernie Cortes, Frank Pierson, Pearl Ceasar, Christine Stephens, Maribeth Larkin, Perry Perkins, Willie Bennett, Judy Donovan, and Mike Gecan, in particular, made thoughtful comments on earlier drafts of this book. I thank them for their efforts to deepen my understanding of their work, and more broadly, of the problems and prospects for American democracy.
Theda Skocpol provided crucial intellectual and practical support to this study at all stages. Her efforts to pursue scholarship that is socially and politically engaged has served as a model for me. Margaret Weir and John Campbell helped me formulate the research project, challenged my ideas, and offered much needed personal encouragement. Margaret stuck with me through the book-writing stage, making insightful comments on successive drafts and helping me see the light at the end of the tunnel. Robert Putnam has been a generous supporter and an important influence on my work.
I would also like to thank the many people, scholars, activists, and friends, who helped me formulate the ideas in the book or commented on drafts of my work. These include Derek Bok, Mark Chaves, Cathy Cohen, Dayna Cunningham, Tomni Dance, Michael Dawson, Jorge Dominguez, Peter Dreier, Jean Bethke Elshtain, Rudy Fenwick, Janice Fine, Jeanne Flavin, Marshall Ganz, Mike Gecan, Ranjay Gulati, David Hart, Neil Jamison, James Jennings, Roger Karapin, James Kelly, Robert Kleidman, Cameron MacDonald, Mike Miller, Manuel Pastor, Jr., Robert Pekkanen, Kent Portney, Rudy Rosales, Susan Saegert, Michael Sandel, Heywood Sanders, Dennis Shirley, Carmen Sirianni, Randy Stoecker, J. Phillip Thompson, Roberta Udoh, Jon van Til, Russell Warren, Mary Waters, Robert H. Wilson, Clyde Wilcox, William Julius Wilson, and Richard L. Wood.
I presented parts of this research at meetings of the American Sociological Association, American Political Science Association, Association for the Sociology of Religion, and the Association for the Advancement of Social Work with Groups. I also made presentations at the Sawyer Seminar on the Performance of Democracies, the Program on Non-violent Sanctions and the American Political Development Seminar at Harvard University, as well as seminars at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, the Georgetown Public Policy Institute and the Sociology Department’s colloquium at Fordham University. I would like to thank participants at all these forums for their helpful comments.
The research for this study was funded in part by grants from the American Academy of Arts and Sciences Project on Social Capital and Public Affairs, the Ford Foundation, the Louisville Institute of the Lilly Endowment, and Fordham University. I received fellowship support from the Sawyer Program on the Performance of Democracies and the Program on Non-violent Sanctions, both at Harvard University’s Center for International Affairs, as well as from Fordham University.
I would like to thank the faculty and staff in Fordham University’s Sociology Department for friendship and collegial encouragement, and especially Rosemary Cooney and Doyle McCarthy for support as Departmental Chairs, James Dobson for research assistance, and Rosa Giglio and Paula Genova for practical help and warm support. Judith Vichniac, Sue Borges, and other members of the Committee on Degrees in Social Studies at Harvard University provided a friendly and supportive academic home at an earlier point in the study.
My family and friends have been tremendously supportive to me during the writing of this book. I could not have made it without their encouragement and faith in me. I would particularly like to thank my parents Russell and Elena, my sisters Cindy and Nancy and their husbands Michael and Russ, my mum Florence and my brothers David and Adam, and so many of my uncles, aunts, and cousins who have cheered me on. Thanks as well to Ranjay, Anu, Christina, Jerry, Huguette, Tunde, Crystal, Barbara, Gary, Nancy, Marshall, Phil, Dayna, Sylvia, Ricardo, David, Marion, Jeanette, Rhea, Jean, Andy, Melanie, Sandra, Vivien, Emily, Greta, Jeanne, Mary, Bill, and so many more friends. Finally, I would like to thank Brian Ricci and all my friends at his karate school, especially Jack and Richard.
I was fortunate to go through graduate studies and the struggles of writing a book with Tomni Dance, an experience that has made us lifelong friends. Her uncle, Bernard Duse, graciously offered his home to me so that I could get away from it all for a quiet time of reflection and writing. This book would never have been finished without his support and friendship.
Roberta Udoh has been my intellectual, political, and emotional soul-mate through life. Her spirit of intolerance toward poverty and her determination to fight injustice infuse the words in this book. My debt to her is forever. Our daughter Folasade was conceived at just about the same time as this project. Our second daughter Imoh has enriched our lives since then. My children have helped me understand in a much deeper way why so many parents spend their precious time working in the IAF. I hope my research may contribute to making the world a better place for our girls and for all children.
DRY BONES RATTLING
Introduction
Dry Bones Rattling
Them bones, them bones,
Father Al Jost began his prayer.¹ The thirty community leaders present were nervous. These women—school secretaries, homemakers, and nurses—came from poor Mexican-American neighborhoods of San Antonio, Texas. They were nervous because they were about to take the stage to lead the twentieth-anniversary convention of their organization: Communities Organized for Public Service (COPS). Thirty-five hundred supporters waited for them behind placards announcing Saint Leo’s
and Saint Gabriel,
that is, the Catholic parishes of the west and south sides of San Antonio. The leaders were going to face the governor of Texas, the mayor, a majority of San Antonio’s city councilors, and the CEOs of the largest local banks. They intended to demand support for COPS’ programs in the areas of affordable housing, job training, and school reform.
The leaders formed a circle, gathered hands, and Father Al prayed: them bones, them bones.
He told the story of Ezekiel’s prophecy of the valley of the dry bones, a symbol of a community in ruins, physically and spiritually, a community without hope and in despair. Father Al spoke of the bones beginning to rattle, to come together, of sinews forming, and flesh and blood growing. He told of a great army emerging as a symbol of the community coming together to rebuild itself. When Father Al finished, the COPS leaders responded with a resounding amen
and strode onto the stage to the sounds of a mariachi band. All thirty climbed the steps to the podium, exuding an attitude of confidence and collective determination. The community leaders proved equal to the test. Over the next two hours, Texas Governor Ann Richards pledged $500,000 to COPS’ job-training program, and bank executives promised $110 million in housing loans for COPS neighborhoods.
SCHOLARS AND ACTIVISTS used to looking to the east or west coasts for bellwether progressive initiatives may be surprised to find in Texas a group of deeply committed people of faith at the forefront of efforts to revitalize democracy in America. Many Americans think of Texas as a politically conservative state and view the involvement of religion in politics with deep suspicion. Yet anyone concerned with the future of American democracy cannot afford to ignore the work of the Texas Industrial Areas Foundation (IAF), an interfaith and multiracial network of community organizers. In the twenty-five years since Ernesto Cortes, Jr., founded COPS in San Antonio, the Texas IAF has been rattling bones across the state to find a way to fulfill Ezekiel’s prophecy, that is, to rebuild some of our most devastated communities. Over the years the Texas IAF, and its sister organizations in the Southwest IAF network, have figured out a way to combine faith-based community building with nonpartisan political action, a combination that has made the network one of America’s premier experiments in reviving democracy.
If these groups were simply religious advocates for the poor, they would not be very remarkable: America is full of advocacy groups, secular and religious. We lack not advocacy groups, but organizations in which people themselves actively participate in democracy. What makes the Texas IAF distinctive is its ability to engage hundreds of community leaders in active political participation and mobilize thousands of supporters to address the needs of their families and communities. Moreover, in contrast to the racial segregation of American community and political life, the network strives to bring together leaders from Mexican American, African American, and Anglo communities of a variety of faiths and economic circumstances to find common ground for action. IAF-style politics is participatory, and it appears to create organizations with staying power that can get results. Leaders from twelve IAF organizations in Texas, and another nine across the Southwest, work with professional organizers to produce the political power necessary to generate resources for ambitious improvements to their communities. While many organizations come and go in poor communities, through the IAF network, COPS has sustained and expanded its efforts over twenty-five years, delivering more than one billion dollars in resources to improve its neighborhoods and the lives of Hispanic families.
This book challenges conventional assumptions that religious intervention in politics can only mean the effort to impose a group’s moral teachings on society. To be sure, many IAF participants see their political activity as moral work. Religious commitments to community caring, family well-being, and social justice inspire and sustain political participation in IAF organizations. But the IAF network does not pursue hot button social issues like abortion, gay rights, or prayer in school. Instead, the network engages faith traditions in an effort to construct a politics that addresses the concrete needs of families in low-income communities of color and of working Americans more broadly. IAF organizations work to build housing, improve schools, develop job-training programs, construct parks and libraries, and otherwise strengthen the frayed social fabric of neighborhood life. We will want to consider the kinds of limitations imposed by the religious base of the IAF network. Yet it is important to recognize that faith values can bring essential resources to efforts at democratic revitalization, depending on how those energies are directed.
As the opening to this Introduction suggests, the deep religious faith of people and the support they receive from fellow parishioners help generate the vision and confidence necessary to enter the public arena as leaders of long-neglected communities. But the IAF is a political organization, not a religious one. Although people of faith in the Texas IAF are deeply committed to community caring, the network is anything but a feel good
community organization. Shrewd and tough political fighters lead the network’s organizations, with the explicit goal of building political power. Poor communities in America face tough challenges, and the IAF exudes the kind of no-nonsense, pragmatic approach that makes the long hours of hard work pay off for people’s communities.
The IAF’s brand of power politics has earned the network its share of critics. Any serious effort to empower the poor and people of color is likely to have its detractors; the IAF is no exception. We will want to examine these criticisms, even as we place them in the larger context of the network’s impressive and often unique accomplishments.²
Just as democratic activists in the fifties might have been surprised to see the first mass stirrings of the civil rights movement in places like Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and Montgomery, Alabama, many Americans would not normally look to Texas for cutting-edge democratic initiatives. As it turns out, though, Texas presents an excellent setting for studying democratic renewal. Texas has a more varied political tradition than most people realize. The IAF builds upon a rich history of progressive efforts by African Americans, Mexican Americans, and white populists in Texas.³ The state, moreover, is at the forefront of broad trends in American civic and economic life. Because of its rapidly growing Hispanic population, Texas will become a majority-nonwhite state within the next twenty years.⁴ The rest of the United States will follow after another twenty or thirty years. So we might be well served to seek lessons from the efforts of the Texas IAF to increase political participation by African Americans and Hispanics and to foster understanding and collaboration across racial lines. Meanwhile, Texas is an important center for the information technology and telecommunications industries, especially in places like Austin, Houston, and Dallas. Initiatives by the Texas IAF to improve public schools and develop job-training programs place the network at the forefront of the nation’s efforts to open up opportunities in the new economy for low-income black and Hispanic families and their children.
Although the work of the IAF in Texas and the Southwest places it within a progressive tradition, the network defies easy categorization into either liberal or conservative camps. IAF organizations are officially non-partisan. While the network has more often collaborated with Democrats, it does include Republicans within its ranks and has often found common ground with Republican officials. Moreover, the network’s membership is quite representative of the diversity of views of mainstream America on a variety of social issues. If progressive democracy requires passing a litmus test on a full range of social issues, the Texas IAF would likely fail. As noted above, the network takes no position and no action on such culturally divisive issues as abortion and teaching about gay lifestyles in schools—although the network’s commitment to inclusiveness means it defends the rights of gays to full participation in public life, including its own network. If progressive democracy, rather, means actively cultivating the participation of low-income Hispanic and African Americans and empowering them to address some of the critical issues facing their families and American society more generally, in housing, education, employment, and health care, then the IAF network is very much at the forefront of revitalizing American politics.
The Industrial Areas Foundation and Its Texas Network
The IAF was first established by Saul Alinsky, considered the father
of American community organizing, through his efforts to organize Chicago’s working-class neighborhoods in the 1930s. The IAF gets its old-fashioned name—Industrial Areas Foundation—because Alinsky organized in the areas (neighborhoods) where Chicago’s industry was located. Almost moribund at the time of Alinsky’s death in the early seventies, the IAF network was rebuilt through the efforts of Alinsky’s successor, Edward Chambers, stimulated by the innovations to Alinsky’s methods developed by Ernesto Cortes, Jr., in organizing COPS in San Antonio.
Founded by Cortes in 1974, COPS became the flagship chapter for the revitalized IAF and the foundation of the network’s efforts in Texas and the Southwest. Over the next twenty-five years, Cortes and his staff built local organizations in Houston, Dallas, Fort Worth, Austin, El Paso, the Beaumont-Port Arthur-Orange area in East Texas, Lubbock-Amarillo-Midland/Odessa in West Texas, Fort Bend County outside of Houston, and in the lower Rio Grande valley and Del Rio-Eagle Pass. In the eighties, the local organizations began to operate as a state network, launching statewide campaigns to reform education and bring water services to co-lonias, America’s equivalent of shantytowns along the Mexican border. In 1990, the Texas IAF held its founding convention with 10,000 supporters in attendance. Since the early nineties, the Texas IAF has operated in the context of a growing Southwest IAF network, supervised by Cortes, including affiliates in Phoenix, Tucson, and Tempe, Arizona, Albuquerque, New Mexico, as well as organizations in neighboring Omaha, Nebraska, Des Moines, Iowa, New Orleans and Northern Louisiana. By 1999, the Los Angeles-area IAF organizations had become part of the Southwest IAF as Cortes personally took charge of reorganizing them into a metropolitan-wide affiliate.
The Texas IAF is part of a national IAF network, which includes over sixty local affiliates spread throughout the United States, and is rapidly growing. The national IAF offers training services and professional organizers under contract to local organizations, but does not direct its staff from the national level. Instead, the organizations are grouped together into five semiautonomous regions, with each regional staff directed by a supervisor.⁵ The IAF is most heavily concentrated in the Southwest and along both coasts, but it has expanded in the South and Midwest as well.
Network affiliates operate in most of the nation’s biggest urban areas, including Houston, Dallas, San Antonio, and Phoenix in the Southwest, New York, Baltimore, Philadelphia, Washington, D.C., and Boston on the east coast, and Los Angeles, the Bay Area, and Seattle on the west coast. The IAF moved its national headquarters to Chicago in 1996 in conjunction with founding a major new affiliate in that metropolitan area and to help expand its operations into the Midwest. The IAF has long worked in cities in Tennessee and has begun to spread to other Southern population centers, including Atlanta and New Orleans. Beyond the U.S., the IAF works with sister networks in Great Britain and South Africa as well.
The reach of the IAF is quite extensive, as each local IAF organization is composed of member institutions, mainly congregations, but also schools, unions, and other community-based organizations. Most IAF organizations have twenty to sixty member institutions. United Power for Action and Justice, the Chicago organization, is the largest with 200 member affiliates. Altogether, the IAF reaches roughly one million families through about 2,000 member congregations, schools, and other institutions.
The work of a number of IAF affiliates has begun to attain national recognition. The Texas network’s innovative job-training program, Project QUEST in San Antonio, won an Innovations in American Government Award from Harvard University. Meanwhile, its Alliance Schools education initiative, involving over 100 schools across the state, has drawn the attention of school reformers nationally. The IAF’s East Brooklyn Congregations organization has built over 2,200 moderately priced homes in one of New York’s poorest communities, and is in the middle of constructing another 700 houses. Drawing upon the Old Testament prophecy from the book of Nehemiah to rebuild the walls of Jerusalem, the Nehemiah Homes program became the model for legislation of that name passed by Congress. BUILD, the IAF’s affiliate in Baltimore, worked with the local AFL-CIO to get the city council to pass a livable wage bill that requires all recipients of city contracts to pay workers enough to support a family. The effort raised the wages of 4,000 workers by 44 percent, totaling $8 million in 1995. The IAF’s Metro New York network followed suit and scored a similar victory with New York’s City Council, prompting more than forty other living wage
initiatives around the country. Meanwhile, the IAF’s network in California succeeded in passing what it called a moral minimum wage,
substantially raising the pay of California’s poorest workers.⁶
The work of the Texas IAF gains added significance because it is at the forefront of a growing trend of religious involvement in progressive community and political organizing efforts in America’s inner cities and elsewhere, for which it has often served as a model. In addition to the IAF, three other faith-based community organizing networks work with local organizations around the country. Estimates from a study conducted by Interfaith Funders indicate that the 133 organizations involved (including the IAF groups) incorporate upwards of 4,000 member congregations and other institutions. About 2,700 Americans serve on the governing boards of these groups, 24,000 participate regularly in their activities (e.g., on a working committee), and about 100,000 people attend their public actions. Although white evangelicals are largely absent from this field, Catholics and mainline and black Protestants are well represented. About 2 percent of the congregations are Jewish, and some black evangelical groups are present as well.⁷
Meanwhile, religious institutions serve as the backbone for many independent community development initiatives that have emerged across the country in the last twenty-five years. There are now over 4,000 nonprofit community development corporations active in building affordable housing, in promoting economic development, and in a variety of neighborhood improvement programs. Independent efforts by African American religious leaders and others emerge almost daily to address the problems of crime and drug abuse among inner-city youth.⁸
A wide range of more secular community-building, environmental, and populist organizing efforts has also been inspired by the work of the IAF’s original founder, Saul Alinsky, and the achievements of IAF organizations today. Labor unions, for their part, have begun to take an interest in community-oriented approaches, hiring the network to provide consulting services to some of their organizing drives. The Service Employees International Union scored the biggest organizing success since the thirties by using a community-based approach. It signed up 74,000 home-care workers in Los Angeles County, mostly low-wage women of color, by working through their ties to community networks and faith institutions.⁹
Across the U.S. a wide variety of independent community-building efforts have emerged in the nineties as well. These incipient efforts are not connected to the national networks of faith-based organizing, community development corporations, or unions, but they are spreading as well. No systematic study exists of these efforts, but there is much evidence of them. The National Community Building Network has attempted to act as an umbrella for 163 groups involved in combating poverty and promoting comprehensive solutions to economic and social development. In rural areas, Carol Stack has identified the new wave of community-building activities unleashed by African American women who have returned to southern communities, and Richard Couto documents extensive organizing efforts in central Appalachia.¹⁰
Community building is rapidly emerging as a vital new force for revitalizing democracy at the ground level. It represents a serious effort to reverse what scholars have recently identified as the decline of social capital, that is, the steady deterioration in the social fabric and civic life of American communities.¹¹ What unites these diverse phenomena is a focus on patient, relationship building at the local level, with efforts directed towards concrete improvements to the communities where families live and work. These efforts are rooted in community institutions that engage the participation of Americans often left out of elite-centered politics, especially women and people of color. These participants draw upon value-based commitments to family and community, and, at their best, to social justice and racial inclusiveness as well.
Because the IAF and other community-building efforts eschew media-centered campaigns and controversial moral agendas in favor of patient base-building work, they have so far remained a fairly quiet, often unnoticed phenomenon on the broader public stage. Placing a priority on local organizing, they have yet to come together to produce a national force for political transformation. Nevertheless, they represent one of the nation’s best hopes for reinvigorating our democratic life and reconnecting political institutions to the needs and aspirations of working people and their communities.
Methods of Study
I chose to study the Texas IAF network because it is the essential place to begin to understand this emerging phenomenon of democratic organizing. Texas represents the place where a new model for faith-based community building and political action first emerged through the efforts of Ernesto Cortes and COPS leaders in San Antonio. Moreover, the Texas IAF has built the first community-based effort of its type to reach beyond the limits of local organizing and operate at a statewide level. Although other IAF organizations coordinate staff development and leadership training in other regions, and have recently begun to experiment with state-level initiatives, only in Texas has the IAF forged an active statewide political network and sustained it over a number of years.¹² Strong local organizations combined with state-level action has allowed the Texas network to launch some of the IAF’s most ambitious and sophisticated programmatic initiatives, like Project QUEST in San Antonio and the Alliance Schools reform effort in over 100 schools across the state.¹³ Studying the Texas network presents an opportunity to assess the IAF’s innovative model for community building and political action where it first emerged, where it has reached the farthest, and where it has made the most gains. Moreover, Ernesto Cortes and his staff have consciously sought to elaborate the IAF’s strategy and to influence debates about social capital and democratic politics.¹⁴
Dry Bones Rattling is a work of political ethnography, presenting an examination of the historical development and contemporary experience of the Texas IAF. It identifies the critical contributions to community building and democratic action made by the network, and considers as well the limitations and challenges to its current organizing. By highlighting the broader lessons that can be learned from the interfaith network, I seek to advance our understanding of how to build social capital, forge multiracial cooperation, and revitalize democratic politics in America.
I conducted field work for this study between 1993 and 1999. In order to paint as complete a picture as possible of the Texas IAF, both in its internal operations as well as in its public activity, I collected data from as many sources as possible. First, I made use of whatever printed data existed. Although the news media covers these organizations sporadically at best, I did consult available newspaper accounts. Placing an almost exclusive priority on face-to-face relationships, the Texas IAF publishes remarkably little material. The network distributes no newsletters, and only the very occasional leaflet. I did, however, collect written constitutions, programs distributed at annual conventions, membership lists, and annual reports. I have also examined the several published accounts written by scholars and journalists.
Second, I relied upon interviews to gather most of the historical data on the development of the network. To get the fullest picture from a variety of angles, I conducted in-depth interviews with organizers and leaders in the Texas IAF, elected officials, business people, other community leaders, and observers. Semistructured interviews in each category followed a similar format, with a set of open-ended questions asked consistently of each interviewee. In all, I conducted 80 interviews with IAF leaders, 35 interviews with IAF organizers, and 36 interviews with community/political leaders and observers. Interviews with IAF participants also provided insights into their motivations for participation and upon internal dynamics within the network.
Third, I conducted participant observation of IAF activities on the local, state, and national levels.¹⁵ On the local level, I observed internal organization meetings, large public actions, and private meetings among IAF participants and between IAF participants and other political/community leaders. In all, I observed over 60 activities of local Texas IAF organizations, including annual conventions, accountability nights,
smaller public actions, steering committee meetings, delegates assemblies, leadership training sessions, action committee meetings, one-on-one meetings, and small negotiating sessions with public officials. I observed 5 seminars for Southwest IAF organizers, each of which lasted 2–3 days, and 3 Texas/Southwest meetings of IAF leaders from local organizations. I also attended the IAF’s national 10-day training session held in July of 1994 in Los Angeles.
In order to increase the validity of the study, I triangulated among the data sources. In other words, I used each source of data as a method to test and confirm the information provided by the others. For example, if an IAF organizer reported the number of supporters that attended an affiliate’s annual convention, I checked that number with media accounts and the recollection of elected officials in attendance. If leaders and organizers described their relationship with each other, I considered those descriptions in light of the interactions I observed at internal meetings.
I have sought to increase the analytic power of the study by making use of a number of different comparisons within the network. For example, at various times and for various purposes, I compare the participation of different kinds of churches, the activities of different local organizations, and the motivations of participants from different racial groups. Moreover, I have worked to place this case in a broader comparative context. In other words, comparing the Texas IAF to other American political organizations and community building efforts, I highlight what makes the Texas IAF different and why.
Overview of the Book
Chapter 1 argues that revitalizing American political life requires connecting it to community-based institutions and the values that sustain them. Since these institutions and the social fabric of many American communities, that is, their social capital, are so weak, democratic renewal requires community building. In other words, the two processes must be linked. The chapter discusses the challenges required to build community and revitalize politics in a way that is racially inclusive and politically effective. It then summarizes the key elements of the approach the IAF has developed to meet these challenges. The following chapters of the book offer a detailed examination of how the IAF developed this approach and attempts to implement it in its contemporary organizing.
Chapter 2 examines the development of the IAF’s model for democratic action. It charts the historical process through which professional organizers from the IAF developed a new organizing strategy through their collaboration with community leaders drawn from religious congregations in Texas. The chapter probes the roots of what I call the modern IAF in the work of Saul Alinsky in Chicago during the thirties. It then focuses on the innovations made to traditional Alinsky organizing begun by Ernesto Cortes in San Antonio in the early seventies. By the late eighties, the IAF had developed a theology of organizing,
a strategy that sought to create a powerful connection between faith imperatives and political action.
Chapter 3 shows how the IAF developed statewide issue campaigns in Texas and built a regional network in the Southwest. In the eighties, the Texas IAF became the first community organizing network to move beyond the limitations of local organizing to become a powerful statewide political force. I explore the network’s Alliance Schools reform initiative to show how the federated, network model developed by the Texas IAF seeks to create synergy between local and higher-level political action, so that gains at one level can advance the other. I also discuss some of the tensions that occur in efforts to create broader power without losing a focus on local participation. Meanwhile, as the network expanded to other cities in the Southwest, IAF supervisor Cortes built a large and sophisticated organizing staff, with strong connections to the academic and policy worlds. The Southwest IAF’s institute for organizers, I argue, proved key to advancing local organizing so that the network could establish multilevel collaborations and more ambitious efforts at institutional reform.
Chapters 4 and 5 focus on the development of multiracial collaboration, what I call bridging social capital. Chapter 4 identifies the elements of the IAF’s early multiracial approach through the network’s organizing in Fort Worth. It considers the importance of faith traditions, the network’s institutional structure, and the role of relational organizing to help leaders find common ground for action across racial lines. As essential as this framework is, however, the chapter ends with a consideration of the limits to multiracial understanding when a largely Hispanic and Anglo network fails to pay explicit attention to questions of racism toward African Americans. Chapter 5 then discusses the emergence of a critical mass of African American leaders and organizers in the Texas IAF. It shows how the network came to promote an understanding of the black experience among participants. That process deepened multiracial understanding in the network and prompted some affiliates to take a more assertive posture towards combating racism.
Chapter 6 analyzes the construction of campaigns for community-based policy initiatives. It focuses on the IAF’s political strategy through a case study of Project QUEST, the innovative job-training program developed by the two IAF organizations in San Antonio. In this chapter, I examine how IAF organizations generate effective power by combining confrontation with collaboration. I show how a dynamic between participation and authority in the network creates programs that respond to local needs while incorporating a broader policy perspective. And I explore the set of practices that Texas IAF organizations use to influence candidates to back their proposals and to keep public officials accountable to their agreements. Finally, I consider the contributions and limitations of the IAF’s nonpartisan strategy to holding public officials accountable and to creating effective power for local communities.
Chapter 7 returns to the question of the religious foundations for democratic revitalization. It examines and compares the participation of Hispanic Catholic parishes and African American Protestant congregations in the Texas IAF. I show how both religious traditions contain a rich source for grounding political action in community well-being, but that, in some ways, the African American tradition requires more work to direct toward nonpartisan and multiracial political action. Moreover, I consider the institutional structure of these religious communities to show that, contrary to Utopian preferences for horizontality,
authority remains important to political action, and can be effective when combined with broad participation.
Chapter 8 extends the discussion of authority and participation by examining leadership development and