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Author: preorg

Can't pay won't pay poster from London Renters Union

Whatever happened to the pandemic rent strike? – a view from within LRU

Posted on 29 January, 202215 February, 2022 by preorg

[Please note this is a personal view] The early days of the pandemic and lockdown saw a flurry of activity in London Renters Union, along with nearly every other tenants union in the world. It was clear that people were about to lose jobs and income on a large scale and that many would have…

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The space for a right to housing

Posted on 11 January, 202211 January, 2022 by preorg

London Renters Union, seeing itself as a radical organisation drawing on radical traditions, refers to a ‘right to housing’ seldom, bordering on never – at least in its formal literatures and trainings. Yet as this news clip featuring the union demonstrates, the idea of a right to housing does come up in the union’s street…

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city street with spire

Leftists like us: on the left and recruitment

Posted on 16 November, 202116 November, 2021 by preorg

I have noticed that one key difference between people who are left wing activists and – for want of a better term – ‘normal people’, is that the former are motivated by the very idea of collective action. In the more orthodox left tradition this is collective action in the workplace, while in the post-60s…

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Should we have a right to evict our landlord?

Posted on 27 September, 202127 September, 2021 by preorg

It’s exciting to see tenants in Berlin campaigning to take formerly government owned properties back into public hands, but it does rely on specific elements of German law that we don’t have in the UK. So how could we equalise the relationship between renters and landlords in the UK – not in some hand-wavy level-playing…

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Trauma and social change – some initial thoughts

Posted on 19 August, 202119 August, 2021 by preorg

There is today no strong relationship between therapy and radical politics. In my experience many people who are interested in changing the world are very unsure about therapy. They worry it will seek to dampen their anger. They worry that they will become better adjusted to a world which does not deserve to be accommodated….

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Owning the Earth by Andro Linklater – a review

Posted on 12 July, 202112 July, 2021 by preorg

Owning the Earth is an account of Western land ownership from the medieval period, through colonisation to the present, though it does not, alas, always recognise how geographically restricted it is. While I enjoyed the book’s account of private property in the Anglo-sphere I’d have to disagree with reviews that refer to it as ‘comprehensive’….

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Social knowledge and the academy: a gulf with few bridges

Posted on 3 April, 202126 May, 2021 by preorg

Academia likes to see itself as a producer of knowledge, and that’s difficult to argue with. But most of the time its self-conception goes further than this. We are the knowledge experts, think the academics. We are better at developing knowledge than other people. It’s what we’re paid for. Years of post-modernism has, curiously, failed…

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On dual outcomes in social movement research

Posted on 21 January, 202112 July, 2021 by preorg

The dissertation for my MRes in Geography, available here, was research with London Renters Union into member engagement during a period of high growth in the organisation. From the beginning I designed the research to have two outcomes, one being the dissertation, the other being the work with the union, and a small report I…

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What does community organising mean when there’s no community?

Posted on 25 September, 2020 by preorg

I have been interested in community organising for some time, and am currently part of an organisation trying to do it. When you try to do it, you find it is hard, or at least, we find that. But has it always been this hard? I’ve been reading some historical accounts of community organising in…

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On Participatory Action Research as a burden

Posted on 15 September, 202012 July, 2021 by preorg

I’ve just finished my first attempt at Participatory Action Research within a social movement organisation, specifically London Renters Union. I designed the research so that there would be two types of participatory interaction – interviews and workshops – and two different outputs, one for academia and one for the union. I wouldn’t expect anyone in…

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Recent Posts

  • What social movements don’t always know they need to learn – and a farewell to LRU
  • Machinery or community? What is a tenants union?
  • London Renters Union reserves? Building a union for those who can’t (or won’t) come to meetings
  • Is there a danger of a radical/reformist tension in LRU?
  • Class partnership: how successful organising works
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