• HOME
    • HOME
    • Who We Are
    • How We Started
    • How We Organize
    • What We Do
  • Videos
  • Initiatives
    • Initiatives
    • Recognizing the Stranger
    • Reconociendo al Extranjero
    • Labor Market Intermediaries
    • Living Wages
    • Immigration
    • Disaster Recovery
    • Infrastructure
    • Healthcare
    • Family Finance
    • Alliance Schools
  • News
    • News
    • Click "News" for 2025
    • 2024
    • 2023
    • 2022
    • 2021
  • Readings
    • Readings
    • Ernesto Cortes, Jr.
    • West/Southwest IAF
    • East Coast
    • Saul Alinsky & IAF Tradition
  • Train
  • Contact
    • Contact
    • Subscribe
    • Affiliates
  • Careers
  • Support


  • HOME
    • HOME
    • Who We Are
    • How We Started
    • How We Organize
    • What We Do
  • Videos
  • Initiatives
    • Initiatives
    • Recognizing the Stranger
    • Reconociendo al Extranjero
    • Labor Market Intermediaries
    • Living Wages
    • Immigration
    • Disaster Recovery
    • Infrastructure
    • Healthcare
    • Family Finance
    • Alliance Schools
  • News
    • News
    • Click "News" for 2025
    • 2024
    • 2023
    • 2022
    • 2021
  • Readings
    • Readings
    • Ernesto Cortes, Jr.
    • West/Southwest IAF
    • East Coast
    • Saul Alinsky & IAF Tradition
  • Train
  • Contact
    • Contact
    • Subscribe
    • Affiliates
  • Careers
  • Support

Pages tagged "subsidiarity"


In Light of Pope Francis' Criticism of Both Left and Right Populism, IAF's Community Organizing Offers a 3rd Way

Posted on News by West/Southwest IAF · February 10, 2021 4:23 PM

[Excerpts]

Francis calls for nothing less than a Copernican revolution in our understanding and practice of politics, one in which ordinary people are not a hard-to-reach “periphery” but the center around which the rest of the firmament revolves....

In Let Us Dream, Francis urges the church to be more receptive to such popular alliances—accompanying them both practically and spiritually, without seeking to dominate. He identifies “labor” and “lodgings” as two of the key issues for grass-roots action. The success of the IAF’s Living Wage campaigns, and its renewal of whole neighborhoods in New York and Baltimore through the Nehemiah Housing program, demonstrates the power of institution-based organizing. If parishes and dioceses heed the pope’s call to engage with new vigor in this work, it can play a significant role in the civic renewal that is so urgently needed.

Community organizing has two crucial features that ensure the poorest citizens have agency. First, it is institution-based. Across almost a century of community organizing, both religious and secular organizers have found religious congregations to be the most resilient and powerful institutions on which to build what veteran organizer Ernesto Cortés Jr. calls “a graduate school to teach people how to participate in politics and shape their communities’ futures.”

As Mr. Cortés explained in an interview with Rev. Ritchie: “Citizens are formed through the process of organizing. It requires institutions which can incubate this process by passing on the habits, practices, and norms necessary for humans with different opinions and temperaments to flourish together: to compromise, to talk to and not just about one another, to act in the light of one another’s views and needs and not just unilaterally or selfishly.”

Second, community organizing is inclusive.  Click below for the rest of the article.

[Photo Credit: Paul Haring/CNS]

Pope Francis has Criticized Both the Left and the Right’s Politics. Community Organizing Offers a Third Way, America, The Jesuit Review [pdf]



Tweets by WXSWIAF

Sign in with:

Or sign up:


get updates

Liquid syntax error: Error in tag 'subpage' - No such page slug site.signup_page

Sign in.
Created with NationBuilder
using a public theme by cStreet