How to Build an Anti-Poverty Movement, From the Grassroots Up
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2014/01/19-5
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1. Coalition of Immokalee Workers: If you want to see what is possible through grassroots organizing by those who are most affected by povertyor what it means to set a seemingly unreachable goal and persevere, or understand your opposition and find new ways to challenge itlook no further than the Coalition of Immokalee Workers.
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2. Center for Community Change: For forty-five years, the Center for Community Change has worked with low-income communities and local grassroots organizations to fight poverty. The CCC has intentionally worked behind the scenes, keeping the spotlight focused on members of the communities instead and organizing around issues ranging from voter registration, affordable housing and community development to, more recently, immigration reform, healthcare and retirement security.
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3. Childrens HealthWatch: This countrys political leaders talk a good game about their commitment to the well-being of children, but in too many cases, their actions tell a far different story. That story is captured, in part, by the pediatricians and healthcare professionals at Childrens HealthWatch.
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4. Half in Ten: This campaignwhich I am currently advisingis a project of the Coalition on Human Needs, the Center for American Progress Action Fund, and the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, and it has 200 partner organizations across the country. Its mission is simple: to cut poverty in half over ten years, just as we did between 1964 and 1973.