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Organizing

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  • Worker Centers
  • The Workplace Project
  • No Justice, No Growth: How L.A. Makes Developers Create Decent Jobs
  • Sweatshops on Wheels: Union-Community Coalition Takes Aim at Port Trucking
  • Sewing Alliances: Anti-Sweatshop Activism in the United States
  • Growing Local Food into Quality Green Jobs in Agriculture
‹ Home Is Where the Work Is: The Color of Domestic Labor up Worker Centers ›
  • Printer-friendly version

JUST Jobs? Organizing for Economic Justice

  • Introduction to JUST Jobs? Organizing for Economic Justice
  • Economy in Crisis
  • Economy in Transformation
  • Economic Impacts
  • Organizing
    • Worker Centers
    • The Workplace Project
    • No Justice, No Growth: How L.A. Makes Developers Create Decent Jobs
    • Sweatshops on Wheels: Union-Community Coalition Takes Aim at Port Trucking
    • Sewing Alliances: Anti-Sweatshop Activism in the United States
    • Growing Local Food into Quality Green Jobs in Agriculture
  • Case Studies
  • Resources
  • RP&E Release Party, March 14, 2007, 6-8 p.m.

About RP&E

  • About
  • 2005-13
  • 1995-2005

Links to Back Issues: RP&E 2005-2013

Editor:  B. Jesse Clarke 2005- 20013

 19-2 Cover

New Political Spaces

Autumn Awakening

Globalization Comes Home

Weaving the Threads

20th anniversary cover

16-2cover graphic

16-1cover graphic

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By Jess Clarke

Today’s emerging resistance movements can draw on a long and varied history to challenge the reactionary US government. Racial justice organizing has been the leading edge of progressive change for generations, and lessons learned and leadership from Black liberation struggles are key to moving beyond resistance and toward revolutionary abundance.

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Racial and Gender Justice
  • Read more about Conversations on Race and Resistance

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