Beautiful Rising - Activist Toolkit
Hat tip to Buzzfeed. At Waging Non-violence they are introducing a "new activist toolkit":
Comprised of community organizers, trainers, tech gurus and writers across six continents, the Beautiful Rising team is working to broaden the relatively thin library of resources on creative nonviolence and social change strategy. What’s more, they’ve done it in a way that takes into consideration the concerns of activists in the global south: security, accessibility and usability.
(There's a lot of description and development history)
The website version of the toolkit — equipped with all principles, tactics, big ideas, stories and theories — requires the highest level of connectivity for the full experience, but is still fairly accessible on many slow connections. A visitor to the website can arrange ideas directly in his or her browser and return to them later.
http://wagingnonviolence.org/feature/new-activist-toolkit-arrives-beauti...
Just scratching the surface, here's a sample of the activist tools available:
Tic Tac Civil Disobedience: https://www.beautifulrising.org/module/civil-disobedience
Swot Matrix: https://www.beautifulrising.org/module/swot-matrix
Make Daily Life A Protest: : https://www.beautifulrising.org/module/if-protest-is-made-illegal-make-d...
Beautiful Rising: https://www.beautifulrising.org

Comments
Very interesting! Thanks for the links!
That's a great thing to provide all
in one place. Some of the people who need that information don't have the time to go looking all over.
nice site
Thanks for the links
“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”
Jail Solidarity
Following the link at Beautiful Rising took me here: http://www.actupny.org/documents/CDdocuments/Jailsolid.html
Very astute. This analysis of prison/jail conflicts that promote the divide and conquer tactics of prison authorities is spot on:
The other approach seeks mutual humanization:
Conflict resolution is difficult:
Let me focus on decisions of "the group". I've never watched Orange Is The New Black so I'm operating under serious cultural deprivation here.
In prison/jail the "group" is an ethnic identity clique commonly known as a "Car". The most prevalent "Cars" are (1) Southsiders (2) Pisos (3) Whites (4) Blacks (5) Asians, Samoans and all others. In California LGBTQ people are housed separately and there is also the Old Guy Dorm".
Disagreements are frequently settled with violence. When two "Cars" cannot resolve a dispute shit "pops off" and people go to the infirmary with multiple abrasions, lacerations and broken bones.
The reasons violence "pops off" are irrational and governed by strict rules of discipline that have deep historical roots.
"Cars" have a hierarchy dominated by "the shot caller" and "the Torpedo" who enforces the Shot Callers decisions. There are other minor positions.
The most important thing you need to know about Cars is that they are as racist and sexist as it is humanly possible to be. And did I I l mention that they were violent? The old "ultra violence" might be more accurate: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Clockwork_Orange_(film)
"They'll say we're disturbing the peace, but there is no peace. What really bothers them is that we are disturbing the war." Howard Zinn
Good to know about Beautiful Rising! I like the notes about
everyday protests. Just wear black. Or laugh. They can't arrest you for that (yet).
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