Divided We Can Change the World
Posted: November 23rd, 2015 | Author: Maha Rafi Atal | Filed under: Culture, Politics | Tags: activism, Bernie Sanders, Deray McKesson, Feminism, Germaine Greer, Hillary Clinton, LGBT, prejudice, racism, social change, trans rights | No Comments »Recently, while in India, I met an economist named Deepti Sethi who told me about some research she’s doing into organizations advocating social change, like non-profits and activist campaigns. She and her team have divided them into three categories:
1. Organizations that aim at material change – new laws, money moved from point A to point B.
2. Organizations that aim at ideological change – persuading others that their ideas are wrong, changing hearts and minds.
3. Organizations that aim at personal expression – large protests bearing witness to injustice or support groups validating the experiences of oppressed groups.
All social movements need all of these modes of activism. But, Sethi argued, the organizations that make up these movements (usually) only succeed if they pick one to focus on.
I’ve been thinking about this a lot in recent weeks, as squabbles over feminism and anti-racism have erupted on my social feeds.