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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CounterPunch
Disasters sometimes have a way of focusing public attention on basic human needs and long-term ecological survival. According to the Shareable network, survival is not even possible without a “sharing transformation,” or “a movement of movements emerging from the grassroots up to solve today’s biggest challenges, which old, top-down institutions are failing to address….Amid crisis, a new way forward is emerging…The sharing transformation is big, global, and impacts every part of society.
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CounterPunch
Climate change and pandemics are sad and frightening topics, but they can also be viewed as an unprecedented opportunity for 21st-century societies. These crises can become an excuse to quickly make necessary changes for a healthier future for people and the planet that otherwise may take many years to implement.
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ABC News Channel 12
In 1882, a Russian zoologist and philosopher by the name of Peter Kropotkin visited the Brighton Aquarium. Here, Kropotkin would observe a key piece of evidence supporting his belief that mutually beneficial cooperation, not competition, played the greatest role in the sustainment and continuing evolution of animal species — a revolutionary idea that ultimately became a fundamental tenet of the anarchist movement.
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Mad River Union
Three times a week, a small and changing group of local individuals meets at Bayside Community Hall to cook and package hot meals for distribution in the greater Arcata community.
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CounterPunch
At The Evergreen State College, in Olympia, Washington, our winter-quarter class on “Catastrophe: Community Resilience in the Face of Disaster” began in early January 2020, so our students had early warning of coronavirus as it began to spread around the world, but before the disease or public awareness had reached the United States.
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Rice Thresher
The beginning of a semester can get costly. There’s the gas or the plane ticket it takes to get to campus. Sometimes there’s moving, which can mean lease application fees, security deposits, furnishing and more gas.
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KQED
A disturbing video of a man shoving a 91-year-old elder to the ground in Oakland Chinatown made international headlines, and became a lightning rod in a heated debate about how to best combat anti-Asian racism and promote public safety.
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Crimethinc
Throughout the tumultuous year of 2020, people in many parts of the world were jolted into rediscovering the importance of relying on one another. The people of Puerto Rico, however, have long understood the power of mutual aid as a means of both survival and resistance.
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Kitoconnell.com
Last month, I interviewed Mutual Aid Disaster Relief about one of their most recent projects and their perspective on the dangers and promise of mutual aid during a pandemic and rampant fascism.
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The Response podcast: Radical approaches to disaster relief in New York - ShareableHow do we respond to natural disasters? What comes to mind? Large relief organizations like the American Red Cross? Or perhaps the Federal Emergency and Management Agency? Well, those images are ...
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STORM TROOPERS The Legacy of Occupy SandyFinally cooling off from a bike ride on a 100-degree summer day in an air-conditioned coffee shop with a cup of water, Shawn Carrié takes a moment before he offers his eulogy.
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Occupy Sandy: Horizontal lessons in community-based disaster recoveryPlease support our coverage of democratic movements and become a supporting member of rabble.ca. By the time Hurricane Sandy crashed up on the shores of New York City in October 2012, pundits had ...
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Abandoned by the U.S. government, hurricane-ravaged Staten Island turns to the Occupy movementAll Veronica Skibinski wants is a yellow tag. She had one two weeks ago, so she hired a crew to gut her home in Midland Beach, four blocks from the ocean on Staten Island. Mold-covered drywall and ...
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Left in the Dark: Inside the Buildings of Chinatown After Hurricane SandyAn illustrated dispatch.
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Occupy Sandy Offers Alternative Hurricane Recovery Effort - The New School Free PressIt is no coincidence that the meeting held in the basement of the Church of St. Luke and St. Matthew in Clinton Hill, Brooklyn, is reminiscent of the general assemblies held during Occupy Wall ...
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Occupy Sandy on NBC Nightly NewsThe mainstream (corporate) media would love the world to think we've become another charity organization, but if it helps to bring in some needed support to our...
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Occupy Sandy: A Movement Moves to Relief (Published 2012)In Hurricane Sandy’s aftermath, Occupy Wall Street has tapped into an unfulfilled desire among city residents to assist in the recovery.
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Post-Storm, 'Occupy Wall Street' Becomes 'Occupy Sandy'
NEW YORK - The scene at St. Jacobi church in Brooklyn is controlled chaos: scores of people sorting and distributing tons of aid for relief centers in the hardest-hit parts of New York. Everyone is a volunteer, and all seem to be working at top speed.
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Organizers Set Up Amazon 'Wedding Registry' for Sandy Victims [VIDEO]A group of organizers dubbed "Occupy Sandy" have registered for a wedding on Amazon -- except no one's getting married.
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Occupy Sandy aids storm victimsFor the past few months the Occupy Wall Street movement has been fairly quiet. But due to Superstorm Sandy, OWS has proven to be alive and well. The demonstr...