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Identity, Place, Knowledge
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01 September 2004

Grassroots organizations have long been involved in the education and mobilization of local populations. Through the development of coalition formation, broad-based campaign-organizing and popular and activist education, information and experiences are shared amongst activists and interested individuals. Janet M. Conway looks at how social justice organizations struggle to build momentum when many of the groups are disparate and the development of ideas are often articulated through actions.
Conway examines the experiences within a particular organization, the Metro Network for Social Justice, in Toronto. This small, place-based group contributed, with thousands of others like it, to the demonstrations in Seatle in 1999. These groups have become sophisticated forums to explore the structures of representation, decision-making, democratic governance and problems of inequality and power/knowledge in activist politics. By focusing on MNSJ, Conway is able to explore topics that affect any number of groups involved in social justice and to offer some hard hitting analysis on how it is that small groups scattered around the world are able to affect change.
— Paul Hansen, Chair of Kairos Ecumenical Justice Initiatives
: Preface
: Introduction: The Making and Meaning of Anti-globalization Movements
: Identity: Studying Social Movements
: Place: Grounding Globalization and Resistance
: Knowledge: Why Movements Matter
: The Activist City in an Era of Free Trade
: Re-making Coalition Politics
: Contesting the Neoliberal City
: Knowledge—and the Impasse in Left Politics
: Social Movements and Countervailing Power in a Time of Empire
: References