The University of Wisconsin's Havens Center, through its Labor and Working Class Studies Project, produced several significant forums that analyzed the Wisconsin Uprising. This project is an initiative linking labor, campus, and community.
Media and the Wisconsin Labor Struggle 3 3 2011
The Economics of the WI Labor Struggle 3 11 2011
"What Next for the Wisconsin Labor Struggle? Strategies, Tactics, and Movement Building" 4 27 2011
A site originally created so that WI Capitol Protest activists could share social media with participants in Netroots New York in December 2011.
A Resonant Purpose
Above: Two Citizen Movements Working for Social and Economic Justice. At Left, in early 2011, hundreds of thousands gathered for rallies on the grounds of the WI Capitol; At Right, in that same year, Occupy Wall Street participants maintained an ongoing presence at New York's Zucotti Park.
In that same spirit of solidarity, through this blog, Wisconsin activists hope to share what we have learned through our use of on-line organizing with participants in the Dec. 17-18th Netroots New York conference at Pace University, where several Wisconsinites will be presenting. As a prelude to the conference, we share these samples of innovative organizing from the Wisconsin Uprising linked to social media. Thanks to all who have produced the contributions linked to here, and to all who shared their favorite social media examples, with special thanks to Joanie Juster. Working together, we can and will make a difference!
The blog format was the fastest and most efficient way to bring together these clips for conference goers. Nonetheless, it is a topically-arranged list of content trying to fit into a chronologically-based blog format. A couple of navigation tips: 1) If scrolling through the contents in the order postings are presented, be sure to select "Older Posts" to reach additional listings beyond the bottom of each page, and 2) an ad hoc "Table of Contents" can be found in the Blog Archive list at lower right.
WI CAPITOL PROTESTS
Please venture further into this site to an archive of representative social media from this important social movement, which is still making its presence known three years later.
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