Title: CongregationBased Community Organizing: A Force Against Structural Injustice
1Congregation-Based Community Organizing A Force
Against Structural Injustice
- Professor john a. powell
- February 2, 2005
2Presentation Overview
- Spirituality and Social Justice
- The Meaning of Self
- Suffering- Ontological and Surplus
- Structural and Institutional Inequities
- Designing a Collective Agenda
- Conclusion
3- We are all caught up in an inescapable network
of mutuality, tied in a single garment of
destiny. Whatever effects one directly effects
all indirectly. - -The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
4Spirituality and Social Justice
- What is the relationship between spirituality and
social justice? - We usually focus on how spirituality inspires
social justice work, but not on how working for
social justice informs spirituality. - Spirituality ??Social Justice
5The Meaning of Self
- What is the self? What is our relation between
selves (the unified self)? - Hobbsian view of self
- Egoistic, possessive, separate, isolated,
rational - The unified self
- This perspective is at the heart of spirituality
- Interconnected, interbeing, not egoistically
separate
6The Meaning of Self
- "I" cannot reach fulfillment without "thou."
The self cannot be self without other selves.
Self-concern without other-concern is like a
tributary that has no outward flow to the ocean.
-
- Martin Luther King, Jr., 1967
- Where Do We Go from Here Chaos or Community?
7Suffering
- Suffering is a central concern of both
spirituality and social justice - Existential/ontological (Spiritual Suffering)
- Sense of lack
- Disillusionment
- Separation from each other, the whole that is our
unified selves - Inherent in existence
- Surplus (Social suffering)
- The result of social and institutional
arrangements/structures - Visited on people and groups unequally
8- The need to face and understand our suffering,
and to change toward new values, is perhaps the
basic spiritual narrative-the common core of
world spirituality. - -Roger Gottlieb
9Personal vs Social
- Were constantly in the process of not just
making a world to inhabit, but were constantly
in the process of making ourselves. - Relieving social suffering to move beyond our
self - Must reject structures that limit our ways to
embrace love and hope in all out interpersonal
interaction to come home - Love calls the ego beyond itself
10Personal vs Social
- What does this understanding of the unified self
mean for spirituality/religion? - If one of the foci of spirituality is to engage
suffering and its causes, spirituality must also
be concerned with how institutions and structures
function in society. - Structural racism causes suffering, and animates
a call to spirituality to engage those
structures.
11Structural and Institutional Inequities
- What do we mean by structural racism?
- The system in which public policies, interrelated
institutional practices, cultural
representations, and other norms work in various,
often reinforcing ways to perpetuate racial group
inequity.
12The Source of Disparities
- What are our assumptions surrounding disparities?
How do we understand these disparities if they
are not explained by personal discrimination or
explicit laws and policies? - When do disparities matter?
- Three sources
- Biology The common 19th century theory of
racial, ethnic, and gender inferiority. Much less
prevalent today. - Individuals Culture Idea that individuals
alone can (and should) rise above their
conditions of poverty, and the idea of a
defective culture of poverty. - Structures Institutions States that even
within neutral arrangements and without racist
actors, disparities can still exist.
13The Source of Disparities
- Disparities exist across the US and the world.
- These disparities were historically established
and reinforced through inscription in the laws
and practices along lines of gender, race, class,
religion, etc. - Todays policies and laws are facially neutral,
and racial attitudes are improving, yet
disparities persist
14Structural and Institutional Inequities
- Theoretically neutral policies and practices can
disempower communities of color and distribute
burdens unevenly - Legal racism and personal prejudice now a racial
hierarchy enforced through institutional/structura
l means - Racial hierarchy without racist actors
15Model for Disparate Outcomes
Historically
Today
Biased Structures
De Jure Neutral Structures
What is occurring here to replicate the outcomes
today?
Disparate Outcomes
Disparate Outcomes
Individuals/ Culture
Structures/ Opportunity
16Durable Inequalities
- A structural racism view is suspicious of single
problems cause, solution, or goal. - Durable inequalities are not only
multidimensional, but interact across time and
space as well. - For example, in the largest asset accumulation
policy in the U.S., land was provided for white
families during colonial times and into the
nineteenth century, but not for people of color.
- What affect does this have on racial disparities
today? - What should be done?
17Durable Inequalities
- The typical Black family had 60 as much income
as a white family in 1968, but only 58 as much
in 2002. - Black infants are almost two-and-a-half-times as
likely as white infants to die before age one a
greater gap than in 1970. - At the slow rate that the Black-white poverty gap
has been narrowing since 1968, it would take
until 2152 to close. - African Americans had 55 cents in 1968 and only
57 cents in 2001. At this pace, it would take
Blacks 581 years to get the remaining 43 cents. - While white homeownership has jumped from 65 to
75 since 1970, Black homeownership has only
risen from 42 to 48. At this rate, it would
take 1,664 years to close the homeownership gap
about 55 generations.
Source State Of The Dream 2004 (United for a
Fair Economy)
18Median Net Worth by Race/Ethnicity in 2000
In 2000, the median net worth for Non-Hispanic
White households was 10.5 times the value for
African American households.
Source Net Worth and Asset Ownership
1998-2000. Household Economic Studies. U.S.
Census Bureau (2003)
19Opportunity Structures
- Opportunity structures are the institutional
arrangements, policies and practices that
contribute to the meaning and distribution of
benefits and burdens. - Opportunities exist in a complex web of
interdependent factors.
20Opportunity Structures
21Opportunity Structures
- Housing is a component of a larger set of
interrelated structures that are both affected by
housing and have impacts for the attainment of
safe, stable housing. - Parents who have access to affordable housing
have more money to spend on transportation. - More money spent on transportation provides them
with access to a broader range of jobs. - A better job provides more money, which provides
their children with better educational
opportunities. - Well-fed children with stable housing will do
better in school. - Having access to greater educational
opportunities and doing better in school allows
these children to achieve regular employment.
22Opportunity Structures
- For low-income households and families of color,
fair access to opportunity structures is limited
by segregation, concentrated poverty,
fragmentation, and sprawl in our regions.
23The face of racism looks different today than it
did thirty years ago. Overt racism is easily
condemned, but the sin is often with us in more
subtle formsof spatial racismSpatial racism
refers to patterns of metropolitan development in
which some affluent whites create racially and
economically segregated suburbs or gentrified
areas of cities, leaving the poor -- mainly
African Americans, Hispanics and some newly
arrived immigrants -- isolated in deteriorating
areas of the cities and older suburbs.
Francis Cardinal George, OMI Archbishop of Chicago
24Segregation
- The government plays a central role in the
arrangement of space and opportunities. - Federal housing and lending policies spurred
white flight and segregation - If a neighborhood is to retain stability, it is
necessary that properties shall continue to be
occupied by the same social and racial classes.
A change in social or racial occupancy generally
contributes to instability and a decline in
values. - Excerpt from the 1947 FHA underwriting manual.
25Racial/Ethnic Characteristics of High Poverty
Neighborhoods
- Over 3.1 million African Americans lived in High
Poverty Neighborhoods in 2000 - Hispanics and African Americans made up almost
70 of people living in high poverty
neighborhoods in 2000
Source Stunning Progress, Hidden Problems The
Dramatic Decline of Concentrated Poverty in the
1990s. The Brookings Institute (2003)
26Housing and Job Mismatch
- Blacks moved to cities for opportunities, while
employment opportunities left the cities to the
suburbs - Same patterns beginning to repeat in first-ring
suburbs today. - This movement of jobs away from the labor pool
has made it challenging to connect job-seekers
with jobs - 58 of all welfare participants in the nation
live in central cities. - 70 of all new jobs are in the suburbs.
- 40 of all suburban jobs cannot be reached by
public transportation.
27Median Household Incomes of Racial and Ethnic
Groups (National)
Source Lewis Mumford Center 1990, 2000 Census
28Segregation
- Segregation persists at very high levels for
African-Americans - At 65 (75 in many major metropolitan areas)
- Improving at an extremely slow pace
- People of color in segregated areas own homes on
average with lower values - Municipalities rely on the tax base to provide
essential services, and the tax base is tied to
home values
29Educational Inequity
- Education is one such essential service that is
tied to property values. - Racial segregation in schools strongly
corresponds to economic isolation in schools - The more fragmented a region is, the more
racially segregated are the public schools,
according to research by David Rusk
30Educational Inequity
- There is a large gap between the resources
available to districts with a majority of
students of color and districts where white
students constitute the majority.1 - In 86 of states, school districts with the
greatest numbers of poor children have less money
to spend per pupil than districts with the fewest
poor children.2
31Educational Inequity
- SES of the school is one of the greatest
predictors of student success.
- A middle-class school is twenty-four times as
likely to be consistently high performing as a
high-poverty school.
Source The Century Foundation (2004). Can
Separate Be Equal? www.tcf.org
32Equity-Centered Approach
- Because opportunity structures exist as a web,
a multi-faceted, equity-centered approach is
needed. - What is equity?
- Equity is not equality or treating each person
in exactly the same way. - Equity brings society into balance.
- Equity requires investment in all our human and
communal resources to maximize our potential as
individuals, families, communities and a nation.
Ford Foundations Initiative on Race, Equity,
Community Philanthropy in the American South
33Defining Equity
- Including people where they were once excluded is
a step in the right direction, but it is not
enough. - Equity requires us to consider the larger
relationship between opportunity structures and
durable inequalities - We must acknowledge the interconnecting
relational web within which individuals live and
act.
34A Collective Equity Agenda
- Understanding structural racism as mutually
reinforcing constraints leads us to believe that
changing one of those constraints will bring down
the house of cards. - Historically antimiscegenation laws
- were thought to be the key
- leverage point.
- The civil rights movement
pursued equity in education - Yet when one of the cards is removed,
the house remains standing.
35A Collective Equity Agenda
- How do we pursue strategic interventions to
interrupt these mutually reinforcing constraints
in light of the interrelated and pervasive nature
of inequities?
36Developing an Equity Agenda
- Often our work is transactional, we seek to make
small changes- incremental gains within existing
arrangements. - Strategic transactional change can be
transformative - However, because of the multidimensional nature
of our laws and policies, progress in one area
can cause retrenchment in another.
37A Collective Equity Agenda
- We need transformative thinking
- We need to formulate a COLLECTIVE approach.
- We must identify a leverage point from which to
design a strategic intervention. An area where a
targeted, unified pursuit of equity can
positively impact several other structures.
38A Collective Equity Agenda
- Space as a leverage point.
- Space impacts our employment, health, wealth,
education, access to transportation, childcare
and institutions that facilitate civic and
political activity. - We know space is racialized fair access to
opportunity structures is limited by segregation,
concentration of poverty, fragmentation, and
sprawl in our regions for low-income households
and families of color - Studies such as Gautreauxs housing relocation
program show that moving to opportunity rich
areas produces dramatic social, educational, and
economic improvements.
39The Spatial Distribution of Opportunity in
Chicago
Index of Opportunity The following map
illustrates opportunity mapping in Chicago.
Communities in blue contain the highest
concentration of opportunity, areas in red the
lowest. Note that opportunity is highly
clustered in the northern suburbs.
40The Spatial Distribution of African American
Population Growth
(High growth areas in dark blue). The following
map shows that the largest movement of African
Americans in Chicago (to the south side suburbs)
is in the opposite direction of opportunity in
Chicago (previous map).
41Next Steps
- Our focus should be outcome-oriented,
- We must identify our goals, then align our
institutional arrangements to produce those
desired outcomes while maintaining a human face. - We have and can make progress.
42Progress
- Several states are modifying their approach to
subsidized housing to target more opportunity
rich areas. - Wisconsin Illinois
- Prioritizing LIHTC projects based on location in
employment growth areas. - Illinois/Chicago
- Determining areas of opportunity in Chicago
suburbs - Agreement with business community to consider
workforce housing or transit access for future
investments - Inclusionary zoning.
- Minnesota
- Prioritize LIHTC housing proposals in areas of
both high job growth and high population growth.
43Faith Based Organizations
- Faith Based Organizations offer a great
opportunity
for building coalitions because many
congregations are already diverse racially,
economically, and politically.
44Faith Based Organizations
- BREAD (Building Responsibility Equality and
Dignity) - Columbus, OH
- Education Worked with Columbus Public Schools to
implement a research-based reading program. Made
dramatic gains in the number of children reading
at or above grade level. - Housing Initiated and maintained a campaign to
address the shortage of affordable housing in
Central Ohio. The Affordable Housing Trust Fund
was created, targeting at least half of its
resources to low-income families. In 2001 and
2002, 6.2 million was invested in the AHTF . - Jobs Pushed to increase the access of center
city neighborhoods to outer belt jobs by
increasing public transportation opportunities.
COTA added 38,000 hours of new bus service in
1998 and received a 684,000 grant to expand the
work under the federal Access to Jobs initiative.
45Faith Based Organizations
- PACT (People Acting for Community Together)
- Miami, FL
- Education Worked with 26 elementary schools to
implement a research-based reading program
(Direct Instruction) and improve reading scores.
Helped organize and mobilize parents to address
school-based issues. - Public Transportation In 2002, PACT helped pass
the "People's Transportation Plan to bring
massive improvements in the public transit
system, including a doubling of the bus fleet.
46Faith Based Organizations
- MCU (Metropolitan Congregations United for St.
Louis) - St. Louis, MO
- An interfaith, multi-racial community
organization of 76 member congregations impacting
more than 700,000 people. - Healthcare Helped pave the way for 90,000
children in Missouri to gain access to health
care through passage of presumptive
eligibility. - Jobs Was actively involved in economic
development plans for the St. Louis Lambert
Airport buyout land, which will result in 18,000
new jobs.
47Power Analysis
A power analysis can help identify key pressure
points, non-traditional allies, and possible
points of friction and tension.
- What is our goal?
- Who shares our concerns?
- What is the best strategy for creating change?
(grassroots organizing, litigation, policy
changes, a combination?) - What are potential obstacles?
- What tensions need to be addressed between
allies?
48Next Steps
- How can congregations bring a specific structural
focus to the table and still maintain an attitude
of open listening to the diverse needs being
expressed? - How are the core values deeply beneficial to
coalition work and working for radical social
change?
49- I have walked that long road to freedom. I have
tried not to falter I have made missteps along
the way. But I have discovered the secret that
after climbing a great hill, one only finds that
there are many more hills to climb. I have taken
a moment here to rest, to steal a view of the
glorious vista that surrounds me, to look back on
the distance I have come. But I can rest only
for a moment, for with freedom come
responsibilities, and I dare not linger, for my
long walk is not yet ended. - - Nelson Mandela (1994) 1993 Nobel Peace Prize
Laureate
50www.KirwanInstitute.org