Picture of author.
5 Works 888 Members 6 Reviews

About the Author

Image credit: INCITE!

Works by INCITE! Women of Color Against Violence

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Gender
n/a
Nationality
n/a
Map Location
USA

Members

Reviews

7 reviews
This was genuinely a phenomenal book and made me reconsider so much of what I thought I knew about nonprofits and organizing. I became interested in this book because I took a class on Fundraising in Nonprofits last quarter and became increasing distressed about the amount of groveling we were being taught to do in order to secure mediocre fundraising to help people in need. Reading this sort of confirmed what I was already thinking, but expanded it so much more than I had conceived of. show more Anyone who wants to work in the nonprofit sector should definitely read this.

Although it does get a little repetitive at times, because this is a series of essays, they really drive home the point of how the state has been able to co-opt organizing power by making organization into nonprofit, and therefore turning that energy and time that could be used towards making systemic change to getting funding to pay employees (they use examples from the 60s and 70s when most organizing was volunteer-based). It also means that nonprofits are focusing on social services, when they should be focusing on social change.

There was a lot of critique on foundations, saying that "valuable time is spent securing cozy relationships with major donors instead of organizing to dismantle the very systems of oppression that allow this owning class to accumulate unearned wealth," where major donors are both foundations and individuals donating large amounts of money.

I also liked the final section where they talked about revolutionary movements in Latin America and how almost none of them are through nonprofits, if they work with nonprofits it is to help the movement along, nonprofits are specifically NOT the movement. A quote I liked from that section was "revolution is about the process of making power and creating autonomous communities that divest from the state."

At the risk of leaving an insanely long review, I'll leave you with this question from the preface, "Do you think the system is really going to fund you to dismantle it?"
show less
This isn't a hard book to get through from a vocabulary stand point, but the theories are far more radical than I can identify with - thus it took more than a week to get through the first essay. It does raise some awesome ideas to ponder. But I guess since I am a professional feminist, I've already sold out to the man.
Brilliant, nuanced, unusual. This is not a rehash of the same-ol politics. Styles vary widely in the degree of academic baffle-gab employed, but all contain unique ideas. Emi Koyama's thoughtful and self-reflective critique of domestic violence shelters is worth the price of admission.
A must-read for a generation of young people going into or considering nonprofit work. This is a great compilation of essays defining and exploring how nonprofits and foundations co-opt and dominate struggles and make them complicit with capitalism and the state. As disenchanted as I already was with nonprofits, I could take a lot from this book.

Lists

Awards

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Haunani-Kay Trask Contributor
Sylvanna Falcón Contributor
Sista II Sista Contributor
Aishah Simmons Contributor
Renee Saucedo Contributor
Dana Erekat Contributor
Stormy Ogden Contributor
Dena Al-Adeeb Contributor
Loretta J. Ross Contributor
Andrea J. Ritchie Contributor
S.R. Contributor
Neferti Tadiar Contributor
Andrea Smith Contributor
Nirmala Erevelles Contributor
Maiana Minahal Contributor
Patricia Allard Contributor
Sarah Deer Contributor
Julia Sudbury Contributor
Nadine Naber Contributor
Traci C. West Contributor
Elizabeth Martinez Contributor
Emi Koyama Contributor
Rosa Linda Fregoso Contributor
Dorothy Roberts Contributor
TransJustice Contributor

Statistics

Works
5
Members
888
Popularity
#28,846
Rating
4.1
Reviews
6
ISBNs
9

Charts & Graphs