At a time in which the everyday practice of democracy atrophies as political, economic, and technological forces weaken our capacity for collective action, this book is for anyone who wants to work with other people to create real, democratic and lasting change. Rooted in my 60 years of organizing, teaching, and learning I draw on the values, ideas and skills driving an actionable framework of how to do it: the creation and substance of relationships, the fuel of values and narrative, the resources and power of strategy, the accountability of action, and the necessity of structure. Rather than offering students, educators, and organizers a blueprint of what to do, we offer a road map for learning how to do it, how to share it with others, and how to bring purpose, skill, and craft to it. In fact, the learning this book shares grew out of work interaction with so many of you, your campaigns, and your organizations rooted in values we share.
As a celebration of that work, we are launching a campaign to share lessons this book has to teach with the people, communities, organizations and institutions needed to make any democratic renewal possible.
Please join me on August 27th on this special occasion hosted by the Leading Change Network for a conversation about People, Power, Change.
We also invite you to join us in working together to launch the campaign. Please respond to our asks on this form
Marshall Ganz
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Speakers & presenters
Marshall Ganz is Rita T. Hauser Senior Lecturer in Leadership, Organizing, and Civil Society at the Harvard Kennedy School. He teaches, researches, and writes on leadership and organizing. His book Why David Sometimes Wins (Oxford University Press, 2009), earned the American Political Science Association’s Michael J. Harrington Book Award. Ganz works with the Leading Change Network and dozens of other grassroots groups in the United States and around the world to develop critically needed organizing capacity. In 1965, Ganz joined Cesar Chavez to work to unionize California farmworkers, where he spent the next 16 years. Throughout the 1980s, Ganz led organizing programs in union, community, and electoral campaigns.
Purchase the book on pre-order
The more pre-orders, the better. It is available NOW for pre-order on Amazon or Bookshop.org and can also be requested from your local independent bookseller.
Spreading the
Word
Share news of the book with members of your communities, associations, and networks and invite them to this online book launch.
Joining the book tour
Join us in taking People, Power, and Change on the road in the late summer and fall. We have begun planning with 9 city stops: Los Angeles, San Francisco, Washington DC, Miami, Toronto, Detroit, New York, and Boston. Respond here
Will you host a PPC book event in your city?
Will you join a local PPC city leadership team to organize the visit?
Will you write about the book, arrange interviews, reach out to journalists?
We also welcome your ideas on how you and others can support this effort. Please share them in the “other ideas” box on the form.