Vol. 10, No. 2: Fall 2003
As Californians recover from the tumultuous gubernatorial election in our state while also looking ahead to the 2004 presidential election, the issue of electoral politics looms large. The question is: how do activists and organizations struggling to promote equity in low-income communities and communities of color incorporate electoral politics into our work?
In recent years, the Environmental Justice Movement and its allies in the environmental, civil rights, public health, labor and faith-based movements have been assaulted on a number of fronts. It is clear that while our tried-and-true tactics of grassroots mobilization, research and litigation have led to victories, those approaches are not enough. To realize our goals of equity and sustainability, we have to move beyond the strategies we know.
For these reasons, Urban Habitat has begun to explore what an electoral strategy would entail for our organization and communities of color in the Bay Area. For one, it would mean partnering with nontraditional allies, including progressive businesses. It would also mean expending the energy, resources and time to promote an electoral agenda that favors equity instead of always reacting to agendas that undermine it.
This issue of Race, Poverty & the Environment is dedicated to examining the intersection between environmental justice and electoral politics. With key elections on the horizon, we wanted to provide our readers and partners with tools and strategies to influence and implement electoral campaigns.
Download a PDF of this issue (6.1 MB)
10-2 Vol.10 No.2 Fall 2003, Governing from the Graassroots.pdf
4 News From Urban Habitat
6 News From the Center on Race, Poverty and the Environment
Elections 2000/2002
9 The Color of Election 2000
by Bob Wing
13 Beyond Florida: Voting in Tennessee, 2002
by Catherine Danielson
State of Our Union
17 Curbs on Clean Air
by Richard Toshiyuki Drury and A.J. Napolis
20 Right-wing Rollbacks and Our Courts
by Deeohn Ferris
25 Civil Rights in Reverse
by Liza Siu Mendoza and Rico Oyola
Building Power: The Case for EJ Electoral Politics
29 The Mother of Movements
by Rob Arnow and Paul Platt
33 Getting Political
an interview with Anthony Thigpenn
38 Organizing is Not Enough
by Robert McKay
Electoral Strategies
41 Learning to Lobby
by Judith Bell
46 Campaign Finance and Civil Rights
by Paul Turner and Hector Preciado
49 One Person, No Vote
by Ludovic Blain III
52 Taking Over City Council
by Amy Dean
55 The EJ Candidate
by Michael Leon Guerrero
59 Precaution as Policy
by Bhavna Shamasunder
63 Electoral Tools and Tactics
by Kimberley Paulson
Rap the Vote
by WireTap Staff
68 Five Things You Can Do to Protect Your Vote
by Melissa Siebert, Stan Goff and Chris Kromm
Resources
69 Resources
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