COPAR
COPAR
COPAR
Service Delivery
Advocacy
Develop ment
Community Organizing
Mobilizing of volunteers
Focused in helping volunteers to be effective
Homeownership, Counseling
Business plan preparation training
Development
Doing for People
Homeownership, Counseling
Business plan preparation training
Community Organizing is the process of building power through involving a constituency in identifying problems they share and the solutions to those problems that they desire; identifying the people and structures that can make those solutions possible; enlisting those targets in the effort through negotiation and using confrontation and pressure when needed; and building an institution that is democratically controlled by that constituency that can develop the capacity to take on further problems and that embodies the will and the power of that constituency.
Community organizing is NOT a technique for problem solving. Those who would use simple confrontation or mass meetings to meet their own selfish need for power, and skip the step of democratic involvement and control in the selecting of issues, the crafting of demands or the negotiating of the victory are called demagogues. Their organizations are a hollow sham, without the empowering aspect that humanizes and ennobles the effort.
Community organizing is not merely a process that is good for its own sake. Unless the organization wins concrete, measurable benefits for those who participate, it will not last long. The groups that content themselves with holding endless meetings and plod along involving everyone in discussions that never lead to action or to victory are doomed to shrink into nothing. People want to see results. That's why they get involved.
Community organizing is not just a neighborhood thing, not just a minority thing, not just a 60's thing. Many - especially those uncomfortable with a particular community organizing effort because it's confronting them at the time - seek to 'label' organizing as somehow out of date or out of place. The fact is that the method, the strategy the science of community organizing has been applied all over the world in situations as disparate as Solidarity. Goal of winning victories and building power.
Community organizing is not just a neighborhood thing, not just a minority thing, not just a 60's thing. Many - especially those uncomfortable with a particular community organizing effort because it's confronting them at the time - seek to 'label' organizing as somehow out of date or out of place. The fact is that the method, the strategy the science of community organizing has been applied all over the world in situations as disparate as Solidarity. Goal of winning victories and building power.
4. Every group has to take into account the fundamental definition of an issue.
An issue is a problem that the community can be organized around. Is it immediate, specific and realizable?
4. Every group has to take into account the fundamental definition of an issue.
An issue is a problem that the community can be organized around. Is it immediate, specific and realizable?
1. Nobody's going to come to the meeting unless they've got a reason to come to the meeting. 2. Nobody's going to come to a meeting unless they know about it. 3. If an organization doesn't grow, it will die. 4. Anyone can be a leader. 5. The most important victory is the group itself. 6. Sometimes winning is losing. 7. Sometimes winning is winning. 8. If you're not fighting for what you want, you don't want enough. 9. Celebrate! 10. Have fun!
Real community organizing is an educational process of action and reflection that puts people into the power game as players. Planning should be a participatory process.
First, define the issue, the goals for the campaign set, and the target selected. Generally, the best plan has one target, a person who could take action to deliver what the group wants. This person needs to be within reach. The more you know about the target, the more you can develop pressure tactics.
In developing a plan, look to cover the 'what ifs.' There are usually three possible outcomes to any plan. In the same way, there are three possible responses to our demands - yes, no or mushy/maybe. In developing the plan, never make empty threats. Threats are very valuable, but if once you are unable to make good on them, your credibility will be weakened for a long, long time.
As the organizer, the job is to design a campaign that could work, so if it doesn't work, point out the reason why, and fix the plan, not blame the people. Through an analysis we identified the weak points of the plan. There are large group of people but very few are actual job seekers and the commitment level is low. Never resort to quick and dirty approach to saving the campaign - and the reputation of the group. Preserved integrity and learned.
Plan to build on the reaction from the other side. Sometimes successful campaigns grew from an almost disastrous failure, through taking advantage of the reaction. Finally, when a meeting is designed to get an agreement from a person, the meeting should be structured to tie that agreement down, tight. The meeting can be focused around the list of demands very simply with either of these methods.
Evaluating the success of your effort is a critical part of any organizing campaign. Don't wait until the end to find out if you were effective. As you carry out your strategy and tactics, assess and evaluate your efforts. One approach is to have the group members answer the following three questions: 1. Is our strategy achieving the desired results-are we closer to the goal? 2. What's working, what isn't? 3. Are our tasks (actions) working--are they helping the group gain support?
An evaluation of the strategy and its results may lead a group to conclude that the reason why they have not met their goal is that the strategy was not fully developed. If your assessment indicates that your strategy is not working, you may need to revise your approach. Re-evaluating and changing tactics is completely acceptable. The bottom line for assessing success is: Did your efforts create the change you wanted? Knowing what worked can help in planning your next organizing campaign.