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Housing Policies, Christian Sociology, Sociology - General & Miscellaneous, General & Miscellaneous Social Policies, New York City - History, Community Organizing, Practical Politics, U.S. Church History
Organizing the South Bronx by Jim R. Rooney β€” book cover

Organizing the South Bronx

by Jim R. Rooney, Nathan Glazer
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Overview

This is a story of heroic and articulate individuals who were able to defy overwhelming odds and build affordable housing in the South Bronx. it is about the process of teaching citizens in a low-income neighborhood how to participate in public life.

Synopsis

This is a story of heroic and articulate individuals who were able to defy overwhelming odds and build affordable housing in the South Bronx. it is about the process of teaching citizens in a low-income neighborhood how to participate in public life.

Publishers Weekly

For urban social-change activists, the strategies and movements inspired by the late Saul Alinsky are the stuff of legend. Alinsky, who died in 1972, taught professional organizers to serve as catalysts, enabling local residents in poor communities to form and control their own movements. Alinsky's Industrial Areas Foundation (IAF) has been around for decades. But because the IAF's activities have received little publicity, just how Alinsky-style movements work is not well known. Now Rooney, a Rye, N.Y., high school teacher, has given us a valuable study of South Bronx Churches (SBC), an IAF project begun in one of the nation's most blighted urban communities in the late 1980s. This is a thorough and insightful book, combining astute historical research with firsthand reporting of SBC's activities. Rooney describes how suburbanization, government neglect and unwise policy transformed the South Bronx from a model community for upwardly mobile immigrants into a slum. He combines that tale with the story of Alinksy and the IAF, bringing them together at the turn of this decade, as people in a Church-based organization set out to reform their community and how it's governed. Along the way, the author gives nuts-and-bolts organizing lessons, making this a useful tool for students and others interested in social change and community empowerment. (Nov.)

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

For urban social-change activists, the strategies and movements inspired by the late Saul Alinsky are the stuff of legend. Alinsky, who died in 1972, taught professional organizers to serve as catalysts, enabling local residents in poor communities to form and control their own movements. Alinsky's Industrial Areas Foundation (IAF) has been around for decades. But because the IAF's activities have received little publicity, just how Alinsky-style movements work is not well known. Now Rooney, a Rye, N.Y., high school teacher, has given us a valuable study of South Bronx Churches (SBC), an IAF project begun in one of the nation's most blighted urban communities in the late 1980s. This is a thorough and insightful book, combining astute historical research with firsthand reporting of SBC's activities. Rooney describes how suburbanization, government neglect and unwise policy transformed the South Bronx from a model community for upwardly mobile immigrants into a slum. He combines that tale with the story of Alinksy and the IAF, bringing them together at the turn of this decade, as people in a Church-based organization set out to reform their community and how it's governed. Along the way, the author gives nuts-and-bolts organizing lessons, making this a useful tool for students and others interested in social change and community empowerment. (Nov.)

Booknews

A study of the process by which the residents of an impoverished urban neighborhood were educated and organized to fight the city government for vacant land and build low-cost, owner-occupied housing. Such organizing, mainly working through traditional churches, is a rapidly growing phenomena in the US and has close analogies throughout Latin America. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Book Details

Published
January 1, 1995
Publisher
State University of New York Press
Pages
296
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780791422106

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