The movement for mutual aid during disasters isn’t something we invented. But we are trying to act as a swiss-army knife for this growing movement of movements, as it becomes more and more critical for our collective survival. One way we are supporting and uplifting this tactic, and the larger autonomous disaster relief movement, of which we are only a small part, is curating a database of news articles about autonomous, liberatory, mutual aid efforts in the context of disasters.
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The Minnesota Daily
Put your money (or groceries, spare time or supplies) where your mouth is.
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Bloomberg CityLab
Free goods and services distributed by mutual aid groups helped vulnerable New Yorkers survive 2020. As the pandemic eases, those organizations are more needed than ever.
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Ithaca Times
After the pandemic hit a year ago, three sites for food sharing suddenly and inexplicably, or at least without fanfare or introduction, appeared in different directions within four blocks of my home in Ithaca’s Southside neighborhood.
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NBC 11 News
Grand Junction Mutual Aid began its nonprofit in March 2020 right as the pandemic hit. On Tuesday, the organization celebrated its first anniversary of hosting weekly food distributions in the valley.
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BK Reader
Throughout the pandemic, Mutual Aid Networks have been a big source of help for underserved communities in the tri-state area. Now, they’re working to get shots in the arms of the people who need it most.
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Texas Monthly
Celebrities and regular folk alike came together to offer hot food, clean water, and warm beds.
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Truthout
About 70 Austinites gathered at the Homeless Memorial and Tree of Remembrance along the south bank of Lady Bird Lake on Sunday for a vigil in honor of unhoused people who lost their lives during last week’s winter storm and blackout in Texas.
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Austin 360
The camp underneath Ben White Boulevard and Manchaca Road had fallen eerily quiet. “The power had gone out and the wind was blowing up drifts against the tents really, really fast and really, really bad,” Debra Sheffield said.
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The Southerner
In the midst of government neglect, unemployment, and economic downturn, many political movements have arisen in attempts to change the structure of a society that has utterly failed the people in the most dire need of its help.
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The Guardian
With huge gaps in the state and local response to the winter crisis, volunteers are stepping up to provide vital services
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My San Antonio
A week that started with smiling snow photos and snowmen took a drastic turn in a matter of hours as San Antonio, like the rest of Texas, was left to freeze in the dark. But through it all the community has seen some light.
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Food and Wine
José Andrés' World Central Kitchen has also mobilized to feed people left without power, water, and food in record-breaking conditions.
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In These Times
Mutual aid builds the collective people power we need to take on the state.
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Block Club Chicago
Volunteers are needed to deliver food, answer the South Shore Blizzard Dig-Out hotline and to coordinate snow shoveling.
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KRCRTV
Four truckloads of donations from the Redding community were collected from last week's Women’s March partnership with the Shasta County Mutual Aid group.
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Bklyner
The East Brooklyn Mutual Aid (EMBA) is hosting a fundraiser to keep their volunteer group organizing food distribution in Brownsville, Ocean Hills, East New York, and Cypress Hills for another month.
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The Lafayette
Lafayette Mutual Aid (LMA) is a student-led movement with two aims: to provide direct assistance to Black and Indigenous students and Lehigh Valley residents, and to shift the ideology of giving toward the direct and immediate assistance of fellow community members.
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South Seattle Emerald
In March of last year, shortly after the city shuttered the first time due to COVID-19, Seattle’s Maria Lamarca Anderson wanted take-out. She called up a BIPOC-owned Filipino restaurant she’d been meaning to try, Beacon Hill’s Musang Seattle.
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San Antonio Report
While much of San Antonio was frozen amid the harsh cold snap, small groups of volunteers have moved about the city, delivering supplies and offering warm places to stay to those without the necessities: food, water, shelter, and heat to stave off the biting winter freeze.
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UC Santa Cruz
Prison abolitionist Mariame Kaba urged like-minded social activists to embrace the spirit of generosity, collective power, and mutual aid during the all-virtual 37th annual Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Convocation.