About this item
Highlights
- Worker centers are becoming an important element in labor and community organizing and the struggle for fair pay and decent working conditions for low-wage workers, especially immigrants.
- About the Author: Kim Bobo is Executive Director of the Virginia Interfaith Center for Public Policy.
- 328 Pages
- Political Science, Labor & Industrial Relations
Description
About the Book
The Worker Center Handbook compiles best practices from around the country on partnering with labor, enlisting the assistance of faith communities and lawyers, raising funds, developing a serious membership program, integrating civic engagement work, and running major campaigns.
Book Synopsis
Worker centers are becoming an important element in labor and community organizing and the struggle for fair pay and decent working conditions for low-wage workers, especially immigrants. There are currently more than two hundred worker centers in the country, and more start every month. Most of these centers struggle as they try to raise funds, maintain stable staff, and build a membership base. For this book, Kim Bobo and Marién Casillas Pabellón, two women with extensive experience supporting and leading worker centers, have interviewed staff at a broad range of worker centers with the goal of helping others understand how to start and build their organizations. This book is not theoretical, but rather is designed to be a practical workbook for staff, boards, and supporters of worker centers.Geared toward groups that want to build worker centers, this book discusses how to survey the community, take on an initial campaign, recruit leaders, and raise seed funds. Bobo and Casillas Pabellón also provide a wealth of advice to help existing centers become stronger and more effective. The Worker Center Handbook compiles best practices from around the country on partnering with labor, enlisting the assistance of faith communities and lawyers, raising funds, developing a serious membership program, integrating civic engagement work, and running major campaigns. The authors urge center leaders to both organize and build strong administrative systems. Full of concrete examples from worker centers around the country, the handbook is practical and honest about challenges and opportunities.
Review Quotes
"This worker center how-to guide is a must-read for every progressive activist and organizer. Through extensive research and firsthand experience, Kim Bobo and Marién Casillas Pabellón have provided a blueprint for building a twenty-first-century movement for social and economic justice."
--Richard Trumka, President, AFL-CIO"As a nuts-and-bolts guide to organizational management, fund-raising, and organizing, The Worker Center Handbook will be extremely helpful to worker centers that are just getting started, as well as to newly hired staff or board members of existing centers."
--Janice Fine, author of Worker CentersAbout the Author
Kim Bobo is Executive Director of the Virginia Interfaith Center for Public Policy. She is the author of Wage Theft in America: Why Millions of Working Americans Are Not Getting Paid and What We Can Do about It and Lives Matter: A Handbook for Christian Organizing and coauthor of Organizing for Social Change: Midwest Academy Manual for Activists. Marién Casillas-Pabellón is the former Worker Center Network Coordinator at Interfaith Worker Justice. Before joining IWJ, she was Executive Director of New Labor, a worker center in New Jersey.