Showing 5 books in Organizing
How to Read a Protest
A grassroots organizer and journalist examines the mechanics of major American demonstrations from 1963 to present, using protest signs as clues to how movements are organized and what makes them effective. Essential for understanding the logistics behind mass mobilization.
Direct Action
A twenty-five-year history of disruptive protest in America, tracing the evolution of tactics from ACT UP to Occupy to Black Lives Matter through hundreds of candid interviews with movement insiders. Covers the operational mechanics of blockades, occupations, and mass campaigns.
This Is an Uprising
Updated edition examining the hidden organizational structure behind movements that appear spontaneous — from the Arab Spring to BLM to anti-Trump resistance. Traces the strategic principles used to spark and sustain transformative unrest, with detailed analysis of how escalation and disruption are choreographed.
No Shortcuts
A veteran labor and community organizer distinguishes between mobilizing and organizing — and argues that progressive movements keep failing because they substitute the former for the latter. Includes detailed case studies of strikes and campaigns that built durable power versus those that burned out.
Rules for Revolutionaries
Digital strategists from the Bernie Sanders campaign identify 22 rules of 'Big Organizing' drawn from running one of the most ambitious grassroots operations in American political history — covering volunteer coordination, distributed logistics, and how to scale participation without losing coherence.