<h2 style="font-weight: normal;"><font size="2">Cheers for this from Brett on the CJA list ~ <br></font></h2><h2 style="font-weight: normal;"><font size="2">If anyone else at CJA is blogging about, or would like to blog about Assemblies and the pursuit of the common political alternative anywhere in the world please get in touch and we can give you publishing keys at <a href="http://www.peoplesassemblies.org">www.peoplesassemblies.org</a> and please feel free to comment on this post at the blogs too <br>
</font></h2>In Solidarity<br><br>Mark<br><br><h2><a href="http://www.peoplesassemblies.org/2011/04/from-copenhagen-to-g20-building-the-peoples-assembly-in-toronto/" rel="bookmark">From Copenhagen to G20: Building the People’s Assembly in Toronto</a></h2>
<div class="pmeta">04.03.2011 <span>·</span> Posted in <a href="http://www.peoplesassemblies.org/category/international/" title="View all posts in International" rel="category tag">International</a> <span></span><a class="post-edit-link" href="http://www.peoplesassemblies.org/wp-admin/post.php?post=430&action=edit" title="Edit Post"></a></div>
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<p><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">The People’s Assembly on Climate Justice</span></strong></p>
<p>The Toronto People’s Assembly on Climate Justice (PACJ) first came
together as part of the community mobilization against the G20. Taking
elements from the Reclaim Power Assembly and Cochabamba , the Toronto
manifestation of the PACJ has held two successful Assemblies, one
immediately before the G20 summit, and another on the December 4<sup>th </sup>2010
Worldwide Day of Climate Action. The first focused on defining the
meaning of Climate Justice from an urban context, while the second
focused on the collective work of building a stronger movement for
Climate Justice in Toronto. For both Assemblies the starting point was
the ‘Framing Question’, a direct importation from the Reclaim Power
Assembly. The framing question is simply a general suggestion for
direction, a starting point from which participants can begin to
generate ideas.<span id="more-430"></span></p>
<p>The main innovation introduced in Toronto was an additional round of
breakouts, which allowed more space for the Assembly’s horizontal
process to both generate ideas and to orient itself for action.
Beginning with the second Assembly, Toronto activists took the working
group model that emerged from Cochabamba and re-framed it as a series of
permanent action-oriented bodies known as People’s Councils. During the
December 4<sup>th</sup> Toronto Assembly, People’s Councils were
created on Movement Building, Outreach & Education, Group
Coordination, Building Alternatives Spaces, Mass Action & Political
Pressure, and Personal Development.. Both assemblies generated more than
200 participants, and over 40 endorsements from community groups in
Toronto.</p>
<p><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Radical Horizontality – Inside the People’s Assembly</span></strong></p>
<p>The movement inside the Assembly is an open collective dialogue which organizers have termed <em>radical horizontality. </em>Within
the Assembly, radical horizontality is a two-pronged process which
allows participants, through two rounds of break-outs and intermittent
plenaries, to first generate ideas, and then to develop and form them
together in order to establish mandates for the People’s Councils.<em> </em>This
concept of radical horizontality also extends to everyday life, beyond
the Assembly, and seeks to establish shared responsibility and
accountability in the entire community, in order to make local
resistance and organizing more sustainable.</p>
<p>From the beginning the Assembly stressed the need for a point of
convergence inclusive to a wide range of organizations, from women’s
groups and anti-poverty, to environmental justice and food security,
cyclists, migrant justice, co-operatives, collectives, etc. To
effectively transform communities, the Assembly posited a lack of
separation between activism and everyday life. Raul Zibechi, a Uruguayan
socio-political theorist, explains how “in the new pattern of action…
mobilization starts in the spaces of everyday life and survival, putting
in movement an increasing number of social networks or, that is to say,
societies in movement, self-articulated from within.” The People’s
Councils were modeled on the hope of facilitating the establishment of
this sort of organizing on a permanent basis, to make the leap from
simply activism to organized communities.</p>
<p> The post-G20 realities of community organizing in Canada presented us
with a challenge, and a new dynamic that calls for activists to
develop, out of necessity, new methods of organizing. This requires
ingenuity, responsibility, and a long-term willingness to sculpt a new
grassroots paradigm. Small beginnings of creative examples were observed
in Canada during the following months.</p>
<p>Various action camps took place throughout the country during the
summer of 2010 themed around climate justice, indigenous solidarity,
non-violent direct action, and Tar Sands/pipeline resistance. Organizers
worked to build links between cities and to strengthen regional
networks. Simultaneous people’s assemblies were held in December
throughout the country, organizers in Montreal began to develop the idea
of a climate justice co-op, and the climate justice community in
Toronto started establishing the People’s Assembly on a permanent basis.
Climate Justice organizers have used the momentum coming out of the G20
to create their own grassroots infrastructure, without waiting for
existing support or external funding.</p>
<p><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Towards a New Model of Organizing </span> </strong></p>
<p>‘The People’s Assembly in Toronto emerged on the tide of a paradigm
shift towards popular assemblies as an alternative to the complete
failure of international institutions and nation-states to address the
urgent global threat presented by the climate crisis. At the same time, a
global Climate justice movement has grown organically; determining its
own shape through horizontal structures and differentiating itself from
mainstream environmental voices through a deeply rooted anti-capitalist
analysis.</p>
<p>By eschewing traditional hierarchical forms, the open and inclusive
process of the Assembly is an invitation for community members and
organizers to come together in an effort to build solidarity, share
skills, and develop increased coordination. The aim of the People’s
Assembly in Toronto is for the climate justice community and its allies
to utilize it as a vehicle or a space through which it can operate <strong>as a movement</strong>, a self-articulated space that will allow it to <strong>remain</strong> a movement.</p>
<p>More info:</p>
<p><a href="http://torontopeoplesassembly.wordpress.com/">http://torontopeoplesassembly.wordpress.com/</a></p>
</div>Apathy is Dead<br><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/solarider/5254770064/#/photos/solarider/5254770064/lightbox/" target="_blank">http://www.flickr.com/photos/solarider/5254770064/#/photos/solarider/5254770064/lightbox/</a><br>
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