🧵 As we race towards the end of a really tough year I thought I’d do a thread for the campaigners - the people who believe we can organise our way past any problem. We’re normally right and that’s both our superpower and our greatest weakness. This year we hit a wall. Hard.
I don’t think the activist community gave ourselves a whole heap of time to process, we just got to work. I love us for it, but if you’re trying to carve out some time to think about the year and campaigns ahead here are some resources and reflections in the hope they help.
This is one of the best bits of analysis I read all year, about what changemakers need to learn about power. If you’re in organising, philanthropy, politics, advocacy or think tanks I think you’ll like it a lot. niskanencenter.org/what-democrats…
The very best thing I read all year was @bulldogshadow’s essay for the weary with its reminder we will get through all this sorrow if “we choose abundance over scarcity, inclusion over violence, and love over death". westernstatescenter.medium.com/for-the-weary-…
Here are some thoughts from the start of the year from a talk for the @wellcometrust. As we approach both mass vaccine roll-out and mass burnout I think they've all stood the test of time but it is lessons 5 and 10 I'll be fixating on in 2021. acevo.org.uk/2020/02/10-thi…
I know lots of activists are getting obsessed with framing and language but if we ever needed evidence that words aren't spells / cure-alls and that we need powerful images and tunes too then surely it's this political ad, the best of 2020 in my view.
I wrote this with @RDarlo about everything we've learnt in the last few years leading campaigns on internationalism and #UKAid. There is a whole load of evidence linked to in the piece but the basic summary is simple: tell love stories. globaldashboard.org/2020/03/30/12-…
If @Imi_Ahmed has taught me anything this year, it’s the absolute truth of his mantra that *digital is different*. This podcast with @Tannerjc lays out @CCDHate's thinking brilliantly as does all the team's research this year. Check it all out. podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/hat…
In retrospect, I wouldn’t recommend setting up a virtual think tank under lockdown but I’m proud of the #OurOtherNationalDebt report and the phenomenal contributors we had and how they charted the disproportionate impact of coronavirus on different people. ourothernationaldebt.com
The summer saw a whole host of fascinating research about relationships, neighbourliness and mutual aid from the @Rships_Project and others. I tried to consolidate a lot of it here. globaldashboard.org/2020/07/08/eff…
I was proud to show up with this gang in support of @Hannah_O_Rourke and @kindacromulent's push to #HonourTheOffer. People fought for us to get access to education so we fought in turn and these freshers will fight when it falls to them, whenver that is.
The team at @Collective_Psyc have been consistently on the money with their analysis about how our inner and outer worlds collide. This year’s output on scenarios, grief and mental health have been consistently superb. This thread gives a flavour.
A thread for everybody interested in whether @BorisJohnson and @RishiSunak are intent on breaking a manifesto promise from the @Conservatives to both the country and some of the poorest people in the world and cutting our life-saving, world-changing #UKAid.
The view from the @CBItweets and the International Chambers of Commerce. Cuts to #UKAid would “hamper gains made on social and economic development, which are prerequisites for businesses to trade". ft.com/content/d0e3f6…
The moral case for keeping to 0.7% on #UKAid as made by the Archbishop of Canterbury. "We mustn’t limit our concept of neighbour simply to those close by to us. We need to heed that message in the tough times as well as the good". theguardian.com/uk-news/2020/n…