Why Don't the Poor Rise Up?: Organizing the Twenty-First Century Resistance
"Each of these essays is a sharpened weapon for the battles looming large on the horizon." —George Ciccariello-Maher, author of Building the Commune

"Combining the most creative thought from the global North and South, Why Don't the Poor Rise Up? promises to be an indispensable resource for understanding why the new revolutionary movement of the 21st century will emerge from the ranks of the most marginalized by capitalism and colonialism." —Ajamu Baraka, editor of Black Agenda Report

“Capitalism is not the answer to poverty but rather its cause! This collection presents diverse global and radical perspectives on the poor and poverty, while demonstrating concretely how and why the poor do rise up! Importantly, the collection presents strategies for building social movements of the radical Left that are a meaningful alternative to the populist right currently in ascendancy.” —Dr. Anna Kasafi Perkins, Catholic theologian, Kingston, Jamaica

Why don't the poor rise up? Even mainstream media like the New York Times and The Economist have recently posed this question, uneasily amazed that capitalism hasn't met with greater resistance. In the context of unparalleled global wealth disparity, ecological catastrophe, and myriad forms of structural oppression, this vibrant collection offers a reassessment of contemporary obstacles to mass mobilization, as well as examples from around the world of poor people overcoming those obstacles in inspiring and instructive new ways. With contributions from Idle No More organizer Alex Wilson, noted Italian autonomist Franco "Bifo" Berardi, Cooperation Jackson organizer Kali Akuno, Cape Town-based anarchists Aragorn Eloff and Anna Selmeczi, and sixteen other scholars and activists from around the world, including a Foreword by Affiong Limene Affiong, Nigerian co-founder of Moyo wa Taifa, a Pan-Afrikan Women's Solidarity Network, Why Don't the Poor Rise Up? presents a truly global range of perspectives that explore the question of revolution, its objective and subjective prerequisites, and its increasing likelihood in our time.

Ajamu Nangwaya, Ph.D., is an educator at Seneca College with over twenty-five years of experience in community organizing and advocacy.

Michael Truscello, Ph.D., is an educator at Mount Royal Universityand author of the forthcoming book-The Infrastructure Society.

1124727072
Why Don't the Poor Rise Up?: Organizing the Twenty-First Century Resistance
"Each of these essays is a sharpened weapon for the battles looming large on the horizon." —George Ciccariello-Maher, author of Building the Commune

"Combining the most creative thought from the global North and South, Why Don't the Poor Rise Up? promises to be an indispensable resource for understanding why the new revolutionary movement of the 21st century will emerge from the ranks of the most marginalized by capitalism and colonialism." —Ajamu Baraka, editor of Black Agenda Report

“Capitalism is not the answer to poverty but rather its cause! This collection presents diverse global and radical perspectives on the poor and poverty, while demonstrating concretely how and why the poor do rise up! Importantly, the collection presents strategies for building social movements of the radical Left that are a meaningful alternative to the populist right currently in ascendancy.” —Dr. Anna Kasafi Perkins, Catholic theologian, Kingston, Jamaica

Why don't the poor rise up? Even mainstream media like the New York Times and The Economist have recently posed this question, uneasily amazed that capitalism hasn't met with greater resistance. In the context of unparalleled global wealth disparity, ecological catastrophe, and myriad forms of structural oppression, this vibrant collection offers a reassessment of contemporary obstacles to mass mobilization, as well as examples from around the world of poor people overcoming those obstacles in inspiring and instructive new ways. With contributions from Idle No More organizer Alex Wilson, noted Italian autonomist Franco "Bifo" Berardi, Cooperation Jackson organizer Kali Akuno, Cape Town-based anarchists Aragorn Eloff and Anna Selmeczi, and sixteen other scholars and activists from around the world, including a Foreword by Affiong Limene Affiong, Nigerian co-founder of Moyo wa Taifa, a Pan-Afrikan Women's Solidarity Network, Why Don't the Poor Rise Up? presents a truly global range of perspectives that explore the question of revolution, its objective and subjective prerequisites, and its increasing likelihood in our time.

Ajamu Nangwaya, Ph.D., is an educator at Seneca College with over twenty-five years of experience in community organizing and advocacy.

Michael Truscello, Ph.D., is an educator at Mount Royal Universityand author of the forthcoming book-The Infrastructure Society.

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Why Don't the Poor Rise Up?: Organizing the Twenty-First Century Resistance

Why Don't the Poor Rise Up?: Organizing the Twenty-First Century Resistance

Why Don't the Poor Rise Up?: Organizing the Twenty-First Century Resistance

Why Don't the Poor Rise Up?: Organizing the Twenty-First Century Resistance

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Overview

"Each of these essays is a sharpened weapon for the battles looming large on the horizon." —George Ciccariello-Maher, author of Building the Commune

"Combining the most creative thought from the global North and South, Why Don't the Poor Rise Up? promises to be an indispensable resource for understanding why the new revolutionary movement of the 21st century will emerge from the ranks of the most marginalized by capitalism and colonialism." —Ajamu Baraka, editor of Black Agenda Report

“Capitalism is not the answer to poverty but rather its cause! This collection presents diverse global and radical perspectives on the poor and poverty, while demonstrating concretely how and why the poor do rise up! Importantly, the collection presents strategies for building social movements of the radical Left that are a meaningful alternative to the populist right currently in ascendancy.” —Dr. Anna Kasafi Perkins, Catholic theologian, Kingston, Jamaica

Why don't the poor rise up? Even mainstream media like the New York Times and The Economist have recently posed this question, uneasily amazed that capitalism hasn't met with greater resistance. In the context of unparalleled global wealth disparity, ecological catastrophe, and myriad forms of structural oppression, this vibrant collection offers a reassessment of contemporary obstacles to mass mobilization, as well as examples from around the world of poor people overcoming those obstacles in inspiring and instructive new ways. With contributions from Idle No More organizer Alex Wilson, noted Italian autonomist Franco "Bifo" Berardi, Cooperation Jackson organizer Kali Akuno, Cape Town-based anarchists Aragorn Eloff and Anna Selmeczi, and sixteen other scholars and activists from around the world, including a Foreword by Affiong Limene Affiong, Nigerian co-founder of Moyo wa Taifa, a Pan-Afrikan Women's Solidarity Network, Why Don't the Poor Rise Up? presents a truly global range of perspectives that explore the question of revolution, its objective and subjective prerequisites, and its increasing likelihood in our time.

Ajamu Nangwaya, Ph.D., is an educator at Seneca College with over twenty-five years of experience in community organizing and advocacy.

Michael Truscello, Ph.D., is an educator at Mount Royal Universityand author of the forthcoming book-The Infrastructure Society.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781849352789
Publisher: AK PR INC
Publication date: 08/08/2017
Pages: 300
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author

Ajamu Nangwaya , Ph.D., is an educator at Seneca College. Ajamu has over 25 years of experience in community organizing and advocacy. He is a former VicePresident of CUPE Ontario, held leadership position in CUPE Local 3907, former member in CUPE Local 3902 and served as a VicePresident of CUPE Toronto District Council.

He is currently an organizer with the Network for the Elimination of Police Violence. He is a columnist with Share newspaper. His writings have appeared in publications such as the Toronto Star, CounterPunch, Dissident Voice, Huffington Post, Rabble.ca, Pride newspaper, and Briarpatch magazine, the Black Agenda Report, Truthout, NOW Magazine and Pambazuka News.

Michael Truscello , Ph.D., is an Associate Professor in English and General Education at Mount Royal Universityin Calgary, Alberta, Canada. His academic interests include anarchism, the politics and poetics of infrastructure, petroculture, media studies, and technology studies. In 2013, he coedited a special issue of Anarchist Studies on “anarchism and technology” with Uri Gordon. In 2011, he produced the documentary film Capitalism Is The Crisis: Radical Politics in the Age of Austerity . He is the author of The Infrastructure Society (MIT Press, forthcoming).

Table of Contents

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Introduction: Why don’t the poor rise up?—Michael Truscello and Ajamu Nangwaya

Section One
"The Psychology of Oppression and Emancipation"
  • 1.1 On The Spiritual Exploitation of the Poor—Nathan Jun
  • 1.2 Society Without Sociability: Late Notes about Margaret Thatcher and Jean Baudrillard, Franco, Bifo, Berardi
  • 1.3 “They’ve turned the guns on the people!?: Towards Healing: Confronting the Impacts of the Grenadian Revolution” —Kimalee Phillip

    Section Two
    "The Politics of Resistance in the Global South"
  • 2.1 Transpacific Affinities: Retracing Our Routes—Sarom Rho
  • 2.2 In Defense of the Territory of Life: A Look at Community Police Territory in Guerrero through the Lens of Health —David Gomez Vazquez
  • 2.3 Resourcefull Organized Communities Undermine Systems of Domination: How the Poor Rise Up in San Cristobal de las Casas —Erin Araujo
  • 2.4 Defeating Invisibility: Black Women and Resistance in Colombia —Charo Mina-Rojas
  • 2.5 On Fire and the 'multiplications' of the Poor in Mathare, Nairobi— Wangui Kimari
  • 2.6 Powers of the Uncivil: Notes From South Africa —Aragorn Eloff and Anna Selmeczi
  • 2.7 Engendering Revolt in the Anglophone Caribbean —Ajamu Nangwaya

    Section Three
    "Fanning the Flames of Resistance in the Global North"
  • 3.1 Not Cooptation nor Charity: Challenges in AntiPoverty Organizing in Canada and the US—Lesley Wood
  • 3.2 Behind Right Wing Populism, A Failed Revolution—Jordy Cummings
  • 3.3 Idle No More: Restorying Hemispheric Resistencia —Praba Pilar and Alex Wilson
  • 3.4 Obstacles for Racialized and Poor People in Bureaucratic Institutions Such as Universityies —Ellie Adekur-Carlson
  • 3.5 Bread and Circuses: Jesus, WorldStar, Assata and George —Thandisizwe Chimurenga
  • 3.6 From the Dead Level: Resistance of the Black Lumpenproletariat and Working Poor —Kali Akuno
  • 3.7 The Counterinsurrectionary Force of the Color Line —Ben Brucato
  • 3.8 Cultivating the Radical Imagination in the North of the Americas— Alex Khasnabish

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