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Mutual aid (organization theory)

Mutual aid is an organizational model where voluntary, collaborative exchanges of resources and services for common benefit take place amongst community members to overcome social, economic, and political barriers to meeting common needs. This can include physical resources like food, clothing, or medicine, as well as services like breakfast programs or education. These groups are often built for the daily needs of their communities, but mutual aid groups are also found throughout relief efforts, such as in natural disasters or pandemics like COVID-19.

Resources are shared unconditionally, contrasting this model from charity where conditions for gaining access to help are often set, such as means testing or grant stipulations. These groups often go beyond material or service exchange and are set up as a form of political participation in which people take responsibility for caring for one another and changing political conditions.

Mutual aid groups are distinct in their drive to flatten the hierarchy, searching for collective consensus decision-making across participating people rather than placing leadership within a closed executive team. With this joint decision-making, all participating members are empowered to enact change and take responsibility for the group.

History edit

 
A mutual-aid soup kitchen Conder Street Mission Hall, 1881

The term "mutual aid" was popularized by the anarchist philosopher Peter Kropotkin in his essay collection Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution, which argued that cooperation, not competition, was the driving mechanism behind evolution, through biological mutualism.[1][2] Kropotkin argued that mutual aid has pragmatic advantages for the survival of humans and animals and has been promoted through natural selection, and that mutual aid is arguably as ancient as human culture.[2] This recognition of the widespread character and individual benefit of mutual aid stood in contrast to the theories of social Darwinism that emphasized individual competition and survival of the fittest, and against the ideas of liberals such as Jean-Jacques Rousseau, who thought that cooperation was motivated by universal love.[3]

Practice edit

Mutual aid participants work together to figure out strategies and resources to meet each other's needs, such as food, housing, medical care, and disaster relief while organizing themselves against the system that created the shortage in the first place.[4]

Typically, mutual-aid groups are member-led, member-organized, and open to all to participate in. They often have non-hierarchical, non-bureaucratic structures, with members controlling all resources. They are egalitarian in nature and designed to support participatory democracy, equality of member status, power-shared leadership, and consensus-based decision-making.[5]

Mutual aid vs. charity edit

As defined by radical activist and writer Dean Spade and explored in his University of Chicago course "Queer and Trans Mutual Aid for Survival and Mobilization", mutual aid is distinct from charity.[6] Radical activist, social welfare scholar, and social worker Benjamin Shepard defines mutual aid as "people giv[ing] what they can and get[ting] what they need."[7] Mutual aid projects are often critical of the charity model, and may use the motto "solidarity, not charity" to differentiate themselves from charities.

Challenges to mutual aid edit

  • Lack of technical experts, funding, and legitimization by the public[8]
  • Lack of full-time staff may limit the volume of work that can be completed, especially work that must be done during traditional operating hours
  • Informal status may disqualify eligibility for government grants and tax benefits
  • Development of concentrated social hierarchies may lead to discrimination and a movement away from mutual aid principles[9]
  • Burnout by those that are able to help maintain mutual aid projects
  • Participants draining resources faster than they are replenished

Examples edit

In the 1800s and early 1900s, mutual aid organizations included unions, the Friendly Societies that were common throughout Europe in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries,[10] medieval craft guilds,[11] the American "fraternity societies" that existed during the Great Depression providing their members with health and life insurance and funeral benefits,[12] and the English working men's clubs of the 1930s that also provided health insurance.[13] In the United States, mutual aid has been practiced extensively in marginalized communities, notably in Black communities, working-class neighborhoods, migrant groups, LGBT communities, and others.[14][15][16][17]

Disaster relief edit

Occupy Sandy edit

In 2012 in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy in the NYC area, mutual aid efforts called Occupy Sandy helped facilitate aid faster and with more efficacy than federal government efforts at the time.

Hurricane Katrina edit

In 2005 after Hurricane Katrina, mutual aid efforts in New Orleans began through the Common Ground Collective. Efforts included aid distribution centers, opening seven medical clinics, house-gutting, roof-tarping, building neighborhood computer centers, debris removal, a tree planting service, establishing 90+ community gardens, and legal counselling services. In 2012 after Hurricane Sandy, people formerly associated with Occupy Wall Street formed Occupy Sandy to provide mutual aid to those affected by the storm. Occupy Sandy distributed clothes, blankets and food through various neighborhood hubs.[18]

Mutual Aid Disaster Relief, a network of activists, has responded to flooding in Baton Rouge, flooding in West Virginia, Hurricane Matthew, Hurricane Harvey, Hurricane Irma, and Hurricane Maria by building health clinics, distributing medication and medical supplies, cleaning debris, gutting buildings, building infrastructure, and distributing supplies. Their aim is to support peoples' survival, empowerment, and self-determination.[19]

2017 Puebla earthquake edit

Due to mistrust of the federal government of Mexico and its corruption, a number of organizations and volunteers were prepared to meet the needs of the people of Mexico City immediately after the Tuesday, 19 September 2017 earthquake. This included removing debris from collapsed buildings, searching for survivors, providing medical attention, disseminating news and information, donating and distributing food, etc.[20]

COVID-19 pandemic edit

During the COVID-19 pandemic, local mutual aid groups and tools were established to help share resources and run errands.[21][22][23][24][25]

In the Philippines edit

Practical bottom–up efforts rooted in the traditional and precolonial spirit of bayanihan have been threatened with glib accusations of sympathizing with causes condemned by the National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict (NTF–ELCAC).[26] Community pantries,[27][28] set up in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic,[26] had been denounced by state officials as being fronts for the Communist Party of the Philippines.[29] Lt. Gen. Antonio Parladé disapproved of the widely circulating narrative that the state had been inadequate in responding to the effects of its own measures in containing COVID-19.[30] Communications Usec. Lorraine Badoy also slammed the National Democratic Front of the Philippines for allegedly setting up community pantries for seditious purposes.[30]

The national-democratic human-rights network Karapatan, in an official statement, hit back, stressing, "Having already been the cause of hardship in the first place, they now have the gall to intimidate?"[31] Senator Pánfilo Lacson also praised the mutual-aid efforts of pantry organizers.[32]

In the United Kingdom edit

The first COVID-19 mutual aid groups in the United Kingdom were founded in Lewisham, Battersea and Hackney on Thursday, 12 March 2020. The pandemic came shortly after the 2019 general election, and relationships formed by young activists as well as a growing political awareness during the Labour Party leadership of Jeremy Corbyn were important to the building of these groups.[33][34]

The UK mutual aid groups have a wide variety of politics. The first groups took inspiration from anarchistic models of community organisation. For example, the Battersea group had a core team of local activists helping residents to self-organise in a non-hierarchical manner. This also allowed the group to connect with local, grassroots organisations providing social care and mental health services. Other groups were more charity-orientated with politics around saviorism rather than a horizontalist interpretation of mutual aid. Although the proliferation of mutual aid groups in the UK brought the term into the common parlance, not everyone involved in the groups are necessarily working from the same understanding of the origins and practice of mutual aid; for example, some groups are more deferential to local authorities and politicians than others. Other conflicts in the early days of the groups included disputes over approaches to safeguarding and data protection (synonymous in the UK with the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)), for example over whether volunteers should be required to have a background check for simply checking in on their neighbours.[33][35][36][37]

After the first few groups were set up, a website called "Covid-19 Mutual Aid" was created to help develop an organisational model for the mutual aid groups and facilitate the sharing of resources. It was frequently misreported as coordinating the groups.[38]

COVID-19 mutual aid groups in the UK undertake a broadly similar range of activities: offering support around shopping, collecting prescriptions, dog walking, and offering a chat to those who are lonely due to self-isolation. Groups tend to organise themselves by initially setting up a Facebook group corresponding to a local authority area, and then from there linking to a WhatsApp group corresponding to a council ward. From there the way that groups organise themselves vary greatly but they usually involve producing leaflets with the phone number of one or several volunteers and then trying to reach as many people in the neighbourhood as possible.[33] Other tools commonly used for organising include Slack, Google Docs, and Zoom.[39]

In the context of the rapid growth of mutual aid groups across the UK, the government attempted to create a centralised effort with the NHS Volunteer Responders scheme. Almost 750,000 people signed up to it, although most of these people were not called upon due to organisational issues.[40]

Academics from the Bennett Institute for Public Policy at the University of Cambridge found that the density of COVID-19 mutual aid groups in the United Kingdom was positively correlated with social capital (that is, areas which are already wealthy are more likely to benefit from the presence of mutual aid groups).[41] In deprived areas like Wolverhampton, mutual aid groups were hampered by the legacy of the United Kingdom government austerity programme.[42]

A report by the New Local Government Network concluded that mutual aid groups are an 'indispensable' part of the United Kingdom's coronavirus response.[43]

Technology edit

Academic and author Joseph M. Reagle Jr. has described contributing to Wikipedia as a form of mutual aid.[44]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Peter Kropotkin; Victor Robinson (26 May 2020). "Introduction". Mutual Aid – A Factor of Evolution: With an Excerpt from Comrade Kropotkin by Victor Robinson. Read Books Limited. ISBN 978-1-5287-9015-4.
  2. ^ a b Kropotkin, Petr (1902). Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution. Retrieved 6 May 2020 – via The Anarchist Library.
  3. ^ Bertram, Christopher (2020), "Jean Jacques Rousseau", in Zalta, Edward N. (ed.), The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Winter 2020 ed.), Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University, retrieved 2020-12-11
  4. ^ H, Katie (27 April 2020). "From Mutual Aid To Dual Power: How Do We Build A New World In The Shell Of The Old?". Plan C. Retrieved 28 July 2020.
  5. ^ Turner, Francis J. (2005). Canadian encyclopedia of social work. Waterloo, Ont.: Wilfrid Laurier University Press. pp. 337–8. ISBN 0-88920-436-5.
  6. ^ Spade, Dean (1 March 2020). "Solidarity Not Charity: Mutual Aid for Mobilization and Survival". Social Text. 38 (1): 131–151. doi:10.1215/01642472-7971139. S2CID 216351581. Retrieved 10 May 2020.
  7. ^ Shepard, Benjamin (2015). Community practice as social activism: from direct action to direct services. Thousand Oaks, CA. p. 166. ISBN 978-1-4833-0937-8. OCLC 962305465.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  8. ^ Zola, I. K. (1972). "The problems and prospects of mutual aid groups". Rehabilitation Psychology. 19 (4): 180–183. doi:10.1037/h0091061. Retrieved December 17, 2020.
  9. ^ Izlar, Joel (2019-11-01). "Radical social welfare and anti-authoritarian mutual aid". Critical and Radical Social Work. 7 (3): 349–366. doi:10.1332/204986019X15687131179624. ISSN 2049-8608. S2CID 211453572.
  10. ^ Sonnenstuhl, Samuel B. Bacharach, Peter A. Bamberger, William J. (2001). Mutual aid and union renewal: cycles of logics of action. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University. p. 173. ISBN 0-8014-8734-X.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  11. ^ Kropotkin, Peter (2008). Mutual aid: a factor of evolution. [Charleston, SC]: Forgotten Books. p. 117. ISBN 978-1-60680-071-3.
  12. ^ Beito, David T. (2000). From mutual aid to the welfare state: fraternal societies and social services, 1890–1967. Chapel Hill [u.a.]: Univ. of North Carolina Press. pp. 1–2. ISBN 0-8078-4841-7.
  13. ^ Shapely, Peter (2007). Borsay, Anne (ed.). Medicine, charity and mutual aid: the consumption of health and welfare in Britain, c. 1550–1950; [5th international conference of the European Association of Urban Historians, which was held in Berlin in summer 2000] ([Online-Ausg.] ed.). Aldershot [u.a.]: Ashgate. pp. 7–8. ISBN 978-0-7546-5148-2.
  14. ^ NEMBHARD, JESSICA GORDON (2014). Collective Courage: A History of African American Cooperative Economic Thought and Practice. Penn State University Press. doi:10.5325/j.ctv14gpc5r. ISBN 978-0-271-06216-7. JSTOR 10.5325/j.ctv14gpc5r.
  15. ^ Bacon, Jacqueline; McClish, Glen (2000). "Reinventing the Master's Tools: Nineteenth-Century African-American Literary Societies of Philadelphia and Rhetorical Education". Rhetoric Society Quarterly. 30 (4): 19–47. doi:10.1080/02773940009391187. ISSN 0277-3945. JSTOR 3886116. S2CID 144385631.
  16. ^ Williams, Colin C.; Windebank, Jan (2000). "Self-help and Mutual Aid in Deprived Urban Neighbourhoods: Some Lessons from Southampton". Urban Studies. 37 (1): 127–147. Bibcode:2000UrbSt..37..127W. doi:10.1080/0042098002320. ISSN 0042-0980. JSTOR 43084635. S2CID 155040089.
  17. ^ Hernández-Plaza, Sonia; Alonso-Morillejo, Enrique; Pozo-Muñoz, Carmen (2006). "Social Support Interventions in Migrant Populations". The British Journal of Social Work. 36 (7): 1151–1169. doi:10.1093/bjsw/bch396. ISSN 0045-3102. JSTOR 23721354.
  18. ^ Feuer, Alan (2012-11-09). "Occupy Sandy: A Movement Moves to Relief". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-05-06.
  19. ^ "Home". Mutual Aid Disaster Relief. Retrieved 2020-12-11.
  20. ^ Campoy, Ana (20 September 2017). "Photos: Mexicans show the world how to work together when an earthquake hits". Quartz. Retrieved 2020-06-14.
  21. ^ Sitrin, Marina; et al. (Colectiva Sembrar) (2020). Pandemic Solidarity: Mutual Aid during the Covid-19 Crisis. 345 Archway Road, London N6 5AA: Pluto Press. ISBN 978-0-7453-4316-7.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  22. ^ "'The way we get through this is together': mutual aid under coronavirus | Rebecca Solnit". the Guardian. 2020-05-14. Retrieved 2020-06-14.
  23. ^ "Gig workers have created a tool to offer mutual aid during COVID-19 pandemic". TechCrunch. Retrieved 21 March 2020.
  24. ^ "COVID-19 Mutual Aid". It's Going Down. 16 March 2020. Retrieved 2020-05-06.
  25. ^ Tolentino, Jia (11 May 2020). "What Mutual Aid Can Do During a Pandemic". The New Yorker. United States: Condé Nast. Retrieved 28 July 2020.
  26. ^ a b Del Mundo, R. (2021, April 21). Mutual aid, community pantries bring out the best in Filipinos and the worst in Duterte's inhumane regime. Philippine Revolution Web Central.
  27. ^ Sadongdong, M. (2021, April 20). "Parladé: Community pantry could be used to urge public to revolt vs gov't". Manila Bulletin.
  28. ^ Chúa, A. (2021, April 21). "Communist" tag halts community pantry for a day. Manila Standard.
  29. ^ Yuvallos, A. (2021, April 20). The gov't's response to the community pantry movement? Policing and bureaucracy. Philippine Daily Inquirer. https://nolisoli.ph/96642/opinion-maginhawa-community-pantry-ayuvallos-20210420/
  30. ^ a b Cayabyab, M. J., Mateo, J., Tupas, E., Hallare, K., Macaíran, E., & Romero, A. (2021, April 21). Palace, DILG, PNP, DOJ, mayors say community pantries should continue as NTF–ELCAC red-tags, profiles organizers. One News. https://www.onenews.ph/palace-dilg-pnp-doj-mayors-say-community-pantries-should-continue-as-ntf-elcac-red-tags-profiles-organizers
  31. ^ Karapatan. (2021, April 20). Karapatan hits red-tagging of community pantries. https://www.karapatan.org/karapatan+hits+red+tagging+of+community+pantries
  32. ^ Torregoza, H. (2021, April 18). Community pantries a sign of people's desperation amid COVID-19 pandemic —Lacson. Manila Bulletin. https://mb.com.ph/2021/04/18/community-pantries-a-sign-of-peoples-desperation-amid-covid-19-pandemic-lacson/
  33. ^ a b c Butler, James (26 March 2020). "THE BURNER 204: After Corbyn + Mutual Aid" (Podcast). Novara Media. Retrieved 28 July 2020.
  34. ^ O'Dwyer, Emma (23 June 2020). "COVID-19 mutual aid groups have the potential to increase intergroup solidarity – but can they actually do so?". London School of Economics. Retrieved 28 July 2020.
  35. ^ Grayson, Deborah (28 April 2020). "Mutual aid and radical neighbourliness". Lawrence & Wishart. Retrieved 28 July 2020.
  36. ^ Spender, Carl (16 March 2020). "Local councils are already trying to sabotage the mutual aid networks". Freedom News. Freedom Press. Retrieved 28 July 2020.
  37. ^ Dhillon, Amardeep Singh (4 May 2020). "The politics of Covid-19: the frictions and promises of mutual aid". Red Pepper. London, England. Retrieved 28 July 2020.
  38. ^ "COVID-19 Mutual Aid UK". Mutual Aid UK. Retrieved 24 March 2020.
  39. ^ Kavada, Anastasia (12 June 2020). "Creating a hyperlocal infrastructure of care: COVID-19 Mutual Aid Groups". openDemocracy. Retrieved 28 July 2020.
  40. ^ Moritz, Judith (24 April 2020). "Coronavirus: Volunteers 'not being called upon' to help NHS". BBC News. United Kingdom. Retrieved 28 July 2020.
  41. ^ Felici, Marco (21 April 2020). "Social capital and the response to Covid-19". University of Cambridge. Retrieved 28 July 2020.
  42. ^ Heppenstall-West, Luke (29 April 2020). "How Austerity Is Undermining Mutual Aid". Tribune. London, England: Bhaskar Sunkara. Retrieved 28 July 2020.
  43. ^ "Communities vs. Coronavirus: The Rise of Mutual Aid". New Local Government Network. 13 July 2020. Retrieved 28 July 2020.
  44. ^ Reagle, Joseph M. (2005-07-28). "A Case of Mutual Aid: Wikipedia, Politeness, and Perspective Taking". reagle.org. Retrieved 2020-12-11.

Bibliography edit

Further reading edit

  • Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution, Peter Kropotkin, 1902
  • Hossein, Caroline Shenaz. 2018. The Black Social Economy. NY:Palgrave Macmillan
  • Syllabus, "Queer and Trans Mutual Aid for Survival and Mobilization" course at University of Chicago with professor Dean Spade
  • What Is Mutual Aid, and How Can It Help With Coronavirus?
  • For All The People: Uncovering the Hidden History of Cooperation, Cooperative Movements, and Communalism in America, PM Press, by John Curl, 2009

External links edit

  • Mutual Aid Societies (lecture by Sheldon Richman)
  • Mutual aid and physical distancing is not new to the Black and racialized minorities in the Americas By Caroline S. Hossein.

mutual, organization, theory, mutual, organizational, model, where, voluntary, collaborative, exchanges, resources, services, common, benefit, take, place, amongst, community, members, overcome, social, economic, political, barriers, meeting, common, needs, th. Mutual aid is an organizational model where voluntary collaborative exchanges of resources and services for common benefit take place amongst community members to overcome social economic and political barriers to meeting common needs This can include physical resources like food clothing or medicine as well as services like breakfast programs or education These groups are often built for the daily needs of their communities but mutual aid groups are also found throughout relief efforts such as in natural disasters or pandemics like COVID 19 Resources are shared unconditionally contrasting this model from charity where conditions for gaining access to help are often set such as means testing or grant stipulations These groups often go beyond material or service exchange and are set up as a form of political participation in which people take responsibility for caring for one another and changing political conditions Mutual aid groups are distinct in their drive to flatten the hierarchy searching for collective consensus decision making across participating people rather than placing leadership within a closed executive team With this joint decision making all participating members are empowered to enact change and take responsibility for the group Contents 1 History 2 Practice 2 1 Mutual aid vs charity 2 2 Challenges to mutual aid 3 Examples 3 1 Disaster relief 3 1 1 Occupy Sandy 3 1 2 Hurricane Katrina 3 1 3 2017 Puebla earthquake 3 1 4 COVID 19 pandemic 3 1 4 1 In the Philippines 3 1 4 2 In the United Kingdom 3 2 Technology 4 See also 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory edit nbsp A mutual aid soup kitchen Conder Street Mission Hall 1881 The term mutual aid was popularized by the anarchist philosopher Peter Kropotkin in his essay collection Mutual Aid A Factor of Evolution which argued that cooperation not competition was the driving mechanism behind evolution through biological mutualism 1 2 Kropotkin argued that mutual aid has pragmatic advantages for the survival of humans and animals and has been promoted through natural selection and that mutual aid is arguably as ancient as human culture 2 This recognition of the widespread character and individual benefit of mutual aid stood in contrast to the theories of social Darwinism that emphasized individual competition and survival of the fittest and against the ideas of liberals such as Jean Jacques Rousseau who thought that cooperation was motivated by universal love 3 Practice editMutual aid participants work together to figure out strategies and resources to meet each other s needs such as food housing medical care and disaster relief while organizing themselves against the system that created the shortage in the first place 4 Typically mutual aid groups are member led member organized and open to all to participate in They often have non hierarchical non bureaucratic structures with members controlling all resources They are egalitarian in nature and designed to support participatory democracy equality of member status power shared leadership and consensus based decision making 5 Mutual aid vs charity edit As defined by radical activist and writer Dean Spade and explored in his University of Chicago course Queer and Trans Mutual Aid for Survival and Mobilization mutual aid is distinct from charity 6 Radical activist social welfare scholar and social worker Benjamin Shepard defines mutual aid as people giv ing what they can and get ting what they need 7 Mutual aid projects are often critical of the charity model and may use the motto solidarity not charity to differentiate themselves from charities Challenges to mutual aid edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message Lack of technical experts funding and legitimization by the public 8 Lack of full time staff may limit the volume of work that can be completed especially work that must be done during traditional operating hours Informal status may disqualify eligibility for government grants and tax benefits Development of concentrated social hierarchies may lead to discrimination and a movement away from mutual aid principles 9 Burnout by those that are able to help maintain mutual aid projects Participants draining resources faster than they are replenishedExamples editThe examples and perspective in this section may not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this section discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new section as appropriate August 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message In the 1800s and early 1900s mutual aid organizations included unions the Friendly Societies that were common throughout Europe in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries 10 medieval craft guilds 11 the American fraternity societies that existed during the Great Depression providing their members with health and life insurance and funeral benefits 12 and the English working men s clubs of the 1930s that also provided health insurance 13 In the United States mutual aid has been practiced extensively in marginalized communities notably in Black communities working class neighborhoods migrant groups LGBT communities and others 14 15 16 17 Disaster relief edit Occupy Sandy edit In 2012 in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy in the NYC area mutual aid efforts called Occupy Sandy helped facilitate aid faster and with more efficacy than federal government efforts at the time Hurricane Katrina edit In 2005 after Hurricane Katrina mutual aid efforts in New Orleans began through the Common Ground Collective Efforts included aid distribution centers opening seven medical clinics house gutting roof tarping building neighborhood computer centers debris removal a tree planting service establishing 90 community gardens and legal counselling services In 2012 after Hurricane Sandy people formerly associated with Occupy Wall Street formed Occupy Sandy to provide mutual aid to those affected by the storm Occupy Sandy distributed clothes blankets and food through various neighborhood hubs 18 Mutual Aid Disaster Relief a network of activists has responded to flooding in Baton Rouge flooding in West Virginia Hurricane Matthew Hurricane Harvey Hurricane Irma and Hurricane Maria by building health clinics distributing medication and medical supplies cleaning debris gutting buildings building infrastructure and distributing supplies Their aim is to support peoples survival empowerment and self determination 19 2017 Puebla earthquake edit Due to mistrust of the federal government of Mexico and its corruption a number of organizations and volunteers were prepared to meet the needs of the people of Mexico City immediately after the Tuesday 19 September 2017 earthquake This included removing debris from collapsed buildings searching for survivors providing medical attention disseminating news and information donating and distributing food etc 20 COVID 19 pandemic edit During the COVID 19 pandemic local mutual aid groups and tools were established to help share resources and run errands 21 22 23 24 25 In the Philippines edit Further information Red tagging in the Philippines Practical bottom up efforts rooted in the traditional and precolonial spirit of bayanihan have been threatened with glib accusations of sympathizing with causes condemned by the National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict NTF ELCAC 26 Community pantries 27 28 set up in the wake of the COVID 19 pandemic 26 had been denounced by state officials as being fronts for the Communist Party of the Philippines 29 Lt Gen Antonio Parlade disapproved of the widely circulating narrative that the state had been inadequate in responding to the effects of its own measures in containing COVID 19 30 Communications Usec Lorraine Badoy also slammed the National Democratic Front of the Philippines for allegedly setting up community pantries for seditious purposes 30 The national democratic human rights network Karapatan in an official statement hit back stressing Having already been the cause of hardship in the first place they now have the gall to intimidate 31 Senator Panfilo Lacson also praised the mutual aid efforts of pantry organizers 32 In the United Kingdom edit The first COVID 19 mutual aid groups in the United Kingdom were founded in Lewisham Battersea and Hackney on Thursday 12 March 2020 The pandemic came shortly after the 2019 general election and relationships formed by young activists as well as a growing political awareness during the Labour Party leadership of Jeremy Corbyn were important to the building of these groups 33 34 The UK mutual aid groups have a wide variety of politics The first groups took inspiration from anarchistic models of community organisation For example the Battersea group had a core team of local activists helping residents to self organise in a non hierarchical manner This also allowed the group to connect with local grassroots organisations providing social care and mental health services Other groups were more charity orientated with politics around saviorism rather than a horizontalist interpretation of mutual aid Although the proliferation of mutual aid groups in the UK brought the term into the common parlance not everyone involved in the groups are necessarily working from the same understanding of the origins and practice of mutual aid for example some groups are more deferential to local authorities and politicians than others Other conflicts in the early days of the groups included disputes over approaches to safeguarding and data protection synonymous in the UK with the EU General Data Protection Regulation GDPR for example over whether volunteers should be required to have a background check for simply checking in on their neighbours 33 35 36 37 After the first few groups were set up a website called Covid 19 Mutual Aid was created to help develop an organisational model for the mutual aid groups and facilitate the sharing of resources It was frequently misreported as coordinating the groups 38 COVID 19 mutual aid groups in the UK undertake a broadly similar range of activities offering support around shopping collecting prescriptions dog walking and offering a chat to those who are lonely due to self isolation Groups tend to organise themselves by initially setting up a Facebook group corresponding to a local authority area and then from there linking to a WhatsApp group corresponding to a council ward From there the way that groups organise themselves vary greatly but they usually involve producing leaflets with the phone number of one or several volunteers and then trying to reach as many people in the neighbourhood as possible 33 Other tools commonly used for organising include Slack Google Docs and Zoom 39 In the context of the rapid growth of mutual aid groups across the UK the government attempted to create a centralised effort with the NHS Volunteer Responders scheme Almost 750 000 people signed up to it although most of these people were not called upon due to organisational issues 40 Academics from the Bennett Institute for Public Policy at the University of Cambridge found that the density of COVID 19 mutual aid groups in the United Kingdom was positively correlated with social capital that is areas which are already wealthy are more likely to benefit from the presence of mutual aid groups 41 In deprived areas like Wolverhampton mutual aid groups were hampered by the legacy of the United Kingdom government austerity programme 42 A report by the New Local Government Network concluded that mutual aid groups are an indispensable part of the United Kingdom s coronavirus response 43 Technology edit Academic and author Joseph M Reagle Jr has described contributing to Wikipedia as a form of mutual aid 44 See also edit nbsp Anarchism portal nbsp Communism portal nbsp Socialism portal nbsp Organized Labor portal nbsp Libertarianism portal Benefit society Communal work Community fridge Gift economy Little Free Pantries Mutual Aid A Factor of Evolution by Peter Kropotkin Mutual credit Mutual organization Mutualism Solidarity Solidarity economy SociabilityReferences edit Peter Kropotkin Victor Robinson 26 May 2020 Introduction Mutual Aid A Factor of Evolution With an Excerpt from Comrade Kropotkin by Victor Robinson Read Books Limited ISBN 978 1 5287 9015 4 a b Kropotkin Petr 1902 Mutual Aid A Factor of Evolution Retrieved 6 May 2020 via The Anarchist Library Bertram Christopher 2020 Jean Jacques Rousseau in Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Winter 2020 ed Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University retrieved 2020 12 11 H Katie 27 April 2020 From Mutual Aid To Dual Power How Do We Build A New World In The Shell Of The Old Plan C Retrieved 28 July 2020 Turner Francis J 2005 Canadian encyclopedia of social work Waterloo Ont Wilfrid Laurier University Press pp 337 8 ISBN 0 88920 436 5 Spade Dean 1 March 2020 Solidarity Not Charity Mutual Aid for Mobilization and Survival Social Text 38 1 131 151 doi 10 1215 01642472 7971139 S2CID 216351581 Retrieved 10 May 2020 Shepard Benjamin 2015 Community practice as social activism from direct action to direct services Thousand Oaks CA p 166 ISBN 978 1 4833 0937 8 OCLC 962305465 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Zola I K 1972 The problems and prospects of mutual aid groups Rehabilitation Psychology 19 4 180 183 doi 10 1037 h0091061 Retrieved December 17 2020 Izlar Joel 2019 11 01 Radical social welfare and anti authoritarian mutual aid Critical and Radical Social Work 7 3 349 366 doi 10 1332 204986019X15687131179624 ISSN 2049 8608 S2CID 211453572 Sonnenstuhl Samuel B Bacharach Peter A Bamberger William J 2001 Mutual aid and union renewal cycles of logics of action Ithaca N Y Cornell University p 173 ISBN 0 8014 8734 X a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Kropotkin Peter 2008 Mutual aid a factor of evolution Charleston SC Forgotten Books p 117 ISBN 978 1 60680 071 3 Beito David T 2000 From mutual aid to the welfare state fraternal societies and social services 1890 1967 Chapel Hill u a Univ of North Carolina Press pp 1 2 ISBN 0 8078 4841 7 Shapely Peter 2007 Borsay Anne ed Medicine charity and mutual aid the consumption of health and welfare in Britain c 1550 1950 5th international conference of the European Association of Urban Historians which was held in Berlin in summer 2000 Online Ausg ed Aldershot u a Ashgate pp 7 8 ISBN 978 0 7546 5148 2 NEMBHARD JESSICA GORDON 2014 Collective Courage A History of African American Cooperative Economic Thought and Practice Penn State University Press doi 10 5325 j ctv14gpc5r ISBN 978 0 271 06216 7 JSTOR 10 5325 j ctv14gpc5r Bacon Jacqueline McClish Glen 2000 Reinventing the Master s Tools Nineteenth Century African American Literary Societies of Philadelphia and Rhetorical Education Rhetoric Society Quarterly 30 4 19 47 doi 10 1080 02773940009391187 ISSN 0277 3945 JSTOR 3886116 S2CID 144385631 Williams Colin C Windebank Jan 2000 Self help and Mutual Aid in Deprived Urban Neighbourhoods Some Lessons from Southampton Urban Studies 37 1 127 147 Bibcode 2000UrbSt 37 127W doi 10 1080 0042098002320 ISSN 0042 0980 JSTOR 43084635 S2CID 155040089 Hernandez Plaza Sonia Alonso Morillejo Enrique Pozo Munoz Carmen 2006 Social Support Interventions in Migrant Populations The British Journal of Social Work 36 7 1151 1169 doi 10 1093 bjsw bch396 ISSN 0045 3102 JSTOR 23721354 Feuer Alan 2012 11 09 Occupy Sandy A Movement Moves to Relief The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2020 05 06 Home Mutual Aid Disaster Relief Retrieved 2020 12 11 Campoy Ana 20 September 2017 Photos Mexicans show the world how to work together when an earthquake hits Quartz Retrieved 2020 06 14 Sitrin Marina et al Colectiva Sembrar 2020 Pandemic Solidarity Mutual Aid during the Covid 19 Crisis 345 Archway Road London N6 5AA Pluto Press ISBN 978 0 7453 4316 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link The way we get through this is together mutual aid under coronavirus Rebecca Solnit the Guardian 2020 05 14 Retrieved 2020 06 14 Gig workers have created a tool to offer mutual aid during COVID 19 pandemic TechCrunch Retrieved 21 March 2020 COVID 19 Mutual Aid It s Going Down 16 March 2020 Retrieved 2020 05 06 Tolentino Jia 11 May 2020 What Mutual Aid Can Do During a Pandemic The New Yorker United States Conde Nast Retrieved 28 July 2020 a b Del Mundo R 2021 April 21 Mutual aid community pantries bring out the best in Filipinos and the worst in Duterte s inhumane regime Philippine Revolution Web Central Sadongdong M 2021 April 20 Parlade Community pantry could be used to urge public to revolt vs gov t Manila Bulletin Chua A 2021 April 21 Communist tag halts community pantry for a day Manila Standard Yuvallos A 2021 April 20 The gov t s response to the community pantry movement Policing and bureaucracy Philippine Daily Inquirer https nolisoli ph 96642 opinion maginhawa community pantry ayuvallos 20210420 a b Cayabyab M J Mateo J Tupas E Hallare K Macairan E amp Romero A 2021 April 21 Palace DILG PNP DOJ mayors say community pantries should continue as NTF ELCAC red tags profiles organizers One News https www onenews ph palace dilg pnp doj mayors say community pantries should continue as ntf elcac red tags profiles organizers Karapatan 2021 April 20 Karapatan hits red tagging of community pantries https www karapatan org karapatan hits red tagging of community pantries Torregoza H 2021 April 18 Community pantries a sign of people s desperation amid COVID 19 pandemic Lacson Manila Bulletin https mb com ph 2021 04 18 community pantries a sign of peoples desperation amid covid 19 pandemic lacson a b c Butler James 26 March 2020 THE BURNER 204 After Corbyn Mutual Aid Podcast Novara Media Retrieved 28 July 2020 O Dwyer Emma 23 June 2020 COVID 19 mutual aid groups have the potential to increase intergroup solidarity but can they actually do so London School of Economics Retrieved 28 July 2020 Grayson Deborah 28 April 2020 Mutual aid and radical neighbourliness Lawrence amp Wishart Retrieved 28 July 2020 Spender Carl 16 March 2020 Local councils are already trying to sabotage the mutual aid networks Freedom News Freedom Press Retrieved 28 July 2020 Dhillon Amardeep Singh 4 May 2020 The politics of Covid 19 the frictions and promises of mutual aid Red Pepper London England Retrieved 28 July 2020 COVID 19 Mutual Aid UK Mutual Aid UK Retrieved 24 March 2020 Kavada Anastasia 12 June 2020 Creating a hyperlocal infrastructure of care COVID 19 Mutual Aid Groups openDemocracy Retrieved 28 July 2020 Moritz Judith 24 April 2020 Coronavirus Volunteers not being called upon to help NHS BBC News United Kingdom Retrieved 28 July 2020 Felici Marco 21 April 2020 Social capital and the response to Covid 19 University of Cambridge Retrieved 28 July 2020 Heppenstall West Luke 29 April 2020 How Austerity Is Undermining Mutual Aid Tribune London England Bhaskar Sunkara Retrieved 28 July 2020 Communities vs Coronavirus The Rise of Mutual Aid New Local Government Network 13 July 2020 Retrieved 28 July 2020 Reagle Joseph M 2005 07 28 A Case of Mutual Aid Wikipedia Politeness and Perspective Taking reagle org Retrieved 2020 12 11 Bibliography editAmaro Hernandez Jose 1983 Mutual Aid for Survival The Case of the Mexican American Krieger ISBN 9780898745467 Awry Wren ed 2023 Nourishing Resistance Stories of Food Protest and Mutual Aid PM Press ISBN 978 1 62963 996 3 LCCN 2022943234 Bacharach Samuel B Bamberger Peter Sonnenstuhl William J 2001 Mutual Aid and Union Renewal Cycles of Logics of Action Cornell University Press ISBN 0 8014 8734 X LCCN 00 012151 Baylouny Anne Marie 2010 Privatizing Welfare in the Middle East Kin Mutual Aid Associations in Jordan and Lebanon Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 22195 7 LCCN 2009045228 Beito David T 2000 From Mutual Aid to the Welfare State Fraternal Societies and Social Services 1890 1967 University of North Carolina Press ISBN 0 8078 4841 7 LCCN 99 41895 Borkman Thomasina 1999 Understanding Self help mutual Aid Experiential Learning in the Commons Rutgers University Press ISBN 0 8135 2630 2 LCCN 98 50649 Borsay Anne Shapely Pete eds 2016 2007 Medicine Charity and Mutual Aid The Consumption of Health and Welfare in Britain c 1550 1950 Routledge doi 10 4324 9781315594699 ISBN 978 0 7546 5148 2 LCCN 2006030263 Bridgen Paul Harris Bernard eds 2007 Charity and Mutual Aid in Europe and North America since 1800 Routledge ISBN 978 0 203 93240 7 LCCN 2007031877 Delalande Nicolas 2023 Struggle and Mutual Aid The Age of Worker Solidarity Other Press ISBN 9781635420111 LCCN 2022027364 Firth Rhiannon 2022 Disaster Anarchy Mutual Aid and Radical Action Pluto Press ISBN 978 0 7453 4046 3 OCLC 1288196115 Gitterman Alex Shulman Lawrence eds 2005 Mutual Aid Groups Vulnerable and Resilient Populations and the Life Cycle Columbia University Press ISBN 0 231 12885 1 LCCN 2005056035 Grubacic Andrej O Hearn Denis 2016 Living at the Edges of Capitalism Adventures in Exile and Mutual Aid University of California Press ISBN 9780520962484 LCCN 2015036704 Midgley James Hosaka Mitsuhiko eds 2011 Grassroots Social Security in Asia Mutual Aid Microinsurance and Social Welfare Routledge ISBN 978 0 203 83178 6 LCCN 2010031554 Moyse Steinberg Dominique 2009 2004 The Mutual aid Approach to Working with Groups Helping People Help One Another 2nd ed Routledge ISBN 978 0 7890 1462 7 LCCN 2004007025 Preston John Firth Rhiannon 2020 Coronavirus Class and Mutual Aid in the United Kingdom Springer ISBN 9783030577131 Servigne Pablo Chapelle Gauthier 2022 Mutual Aid The Other Law of the Jungle Wiley ISBN 978 1509547920 Rebecca Solnit 2020 Sitrin Marina Sembrar Colectiva eds Pandemic Solidarity Mutual Aid During the Covid 19 Crisis Pluto Press doi 10 2307 j ctv12sdx5v ISBN 978 0 7453 4320 4 JSTOR j ctv12sdx5v S2CID 240768553 Swain Dan Urban Petr Malabou Catherine Kouba Petr eds 2021 Unchaining Solidarity On Mutual Aid and Anarchism with Catherine Malabou Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 9781538157961 LCCN 2021034081 Winfield Fretz Joseph 2020 Christian Mutual Aid A Handbook of Brotherhood Economics Wipf and Stock ISBN 9781725283695 Further reading editMutual Aid A Factor of Evolution Peter Kropotkin 1902 Hossein Caroline Shenaz 2018 The Black Social Economy NY Palgrave Macmillan Syllabus Queer and Trans Mutual Aid for Survival and Mobilization course at University of Chicago with professor Dean Spade What Is Mutual Aid and How Can It Help With Coronavirus For All The People Uncovering the Hidden History of Cooperation Cooperative Movements and Communalism in America PM Press by John Curl 2009 Help Gegenseitig behindern oder helfen Eine politische Skizze zur Wahrnehmung heute Wurzburg Konigshausen amp Neumann 2012External links editMutual Aid Societies lecture by Sheldon Richman Mutual aid and physical distancing is not new to the Black and racialized minorities in the Americas By Caroline S Hossein Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mutual aid organization theory amp oldid 1223166893, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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