Top 10 Youth Activism Victories in 2007
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The past 12 months have been filled with many great youth organizing successes; some were covered extensively by mainstream media, and some went—sadly—unnoticed. From these extraordinary stories, WireTap has culled a list of their favorite 10 youth victories of the year. They're not just the events you've heard about, like the hunger strikes at Harvard and Stanford, because the less-attended actions of low-income, low-profile youth groups can be equally triumphant. And they're not just acts of campus activism, either—because half of Americans between the ages of 18 and 25 are not enrolled in college. And though there are countless other examples of protest, cooperation, and informed dissent that went on and are still continuing around the country, here are 10 especially inspirational stories that went down this year. Congratulations to these and all other young people who took responsibility and took charge in 2007 to work hard both with their peers and with other groups, who put their energies into action for their communities, and for the world.
Here's to anticipation for what a new generation of young activists will accomplish in 2008.
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| Sustainability :: Planet at the Crossroads Bill McKibben, YES! Magazine #37, Spring 2006 | |
| 12 Step Program to Stop Climate Change Alisa Gravitz, YES! Magazine #40, Winter 2007 |
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| Compost Toilets and Self-Rule How to end your dependence on the sewage empire. Madhu Suri Prakash, |
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| Everything We Do Is About the Land Sophia Rabliauskas, together with other members of the Poplar River First nation, successfully pushed for an interim protection for 2 million acres of boreal forest. |
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Tired of waiting for politicians and philanthropists, who have pledged for decades to reform education, high school students worked diligently to improve their own schools in 2007. From Urban Youth Collaborative and DRUM in New York, to Rethinkers in New Orleans, to Youth for Justice in Los Angeles, youths across the country organized around everything from violence prevention to building eco-friendly, clean bathrooms. The Detroit Summer Collective is an especially innovative, all-volunteer-run program. In addition to making a documentary in 2007 that looks at the root causes and student-driven solutions to the high drop-out rates, the Collective is transforming the entire city of Detroit by teaching young people how to maintain organic gardens and sell produce to their communities, as well as organizing monthly city pot lucks that act as interracial and intergenerational town halls. A democracy can't thrive without informed citizens, and if the world's wealthiest and most powerful one won't provide a decent K-12 education, these students will bring their communities together to do it.
| Education, by Rights Parents and educators propose an innovative approach to fixing New York's public schools: rebuild the system using human rights. |
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For two years, PIRG and United States Student Association have been mobilizing to get college affordability on the congressional agenda. PIRG's Raid on Student Aid campaign generated more than 10,000 phone calls, in addition to lobbying meetings and emails. The very fact that students were vital to getting the legislation passed shows how important they are for change, and now the Act will help generate even more students. Says PIRG's Luke Swarthout, "Without the work of students over the past two years, Congress probably wouldn't prioritize legislation like the College Affordability and Access Act."
Students in Maine scored two victories this year, when their state legislators voted unanimously to approve a citizen ballot initiative that will provide a tax credit to all graduates to offset their student loan repayment as long as they stay in Maine. The League of Young Voters worked with hundreds of volunteers to gather 73,000 signatures that helped get this unprecedented measure passed.
| Reclaiming Our Freedom To Learn What if students chose what to learn? A school for free people in free communities. |
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A year later, despite mainstream media silence, this story burst into national prominence thanks to the most massive civil-rights-movement mobilization since the '60s when over 10,000 college students, activists, and hip-hop artists converged on Jena. Thousands of youths in Jena and students on campuses nationwide protested a case that epitomized a long-standing history of unfair sentencing of people of color in America. The U.S. has the highest absolute, per-capita, and juvenile rate of incarceration in the world, with a tenth of all black men between ages 20 and 35 in jail or prison. The Jena 6 defense campaign mobilized millions of socially conscious youth, who represent the future leaders in the fight against the persistence of subtle and not-so-subtle racism in America. This massive, grassroots-driven campaign helped overturn the original sentences of the Jena 6, momentum that could be used to help thousands of other youths of color in America who were tried in the same, broken system to attain justice and re-enter their communities.
| Youth Court: A Jury of Their Peers When young first offenders appear before a jury of kids who've "been there," they get a hearing that's tough but compassionate. Edgar S. Cahn, YES! Magazine #15, Fall 2000 |
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| Where FEMA feared to tread Tim Shorrock, YES! Magazine #39, Fall 2006 | |
| Malik Rahim: Spreading Common Ground An interview by Doug Pibel, YES! Magazine #42, Summer 2007 | |
| Accupuncture for All Pamela O'Malley Chang, YES! Magazine #44, Winter 2008 |
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Two years of organizing and protesting finally paid off in April for the Student/Farmworker Alliance, which, in partnership with the immigrant-laborer-led Coalition of Immokalee Workers, finally achieved results from its long-standing boycott against McDonald's. The company agreed to pay an extra penny per pound to its tomato suppliers, nearly doubling the wages of the impoverished pickers in Florida. A month later, the parent company of Taco Bell, which struck a similar deal with the activists in 2005 after four years of their perseverance, announced that it would expand the agreement to its four other chains, including Pizza Hut and A&W.
Thanks to some long, tireless efforts, some of the country's biggest fast-food chains have improved their wage standards. But despite an amazingly successful year, the SFA and CIW aren't about to take a break now: They're still hard at work on getting Burger King to join the much-needed movement.
| Alternatives to a Wall How NAFTA, CAFTA, and other corporate-friendly trade policies displace farmers and create mass migration, and how we can do better. | |
| Union victory for the nation's security guards Lauren Jacobs—Organizing for the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), |
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| The Case of Lt. Ehren Watada by Martha Baskin, YES! Online Guest Column, January 2007 | |
| People Power :: It's Time to Stop the War Ourselves Aimee Allison and David Solnit, YES! Magazine #44 Winter 2008 | |
| Not Your Grandfather's SDS Students for a Democratic Society is reborn, working with veteran activists to build movements for today. Joshua Kahn Russell, YES! Magazine #44 Winter 2008 |
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| Great Resources on Teaching Peace Includes resources on Darfur. YES! Education Connection Newsletter, December 2007 |
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Kristina Rizga is an editor and publisher of the online WireTap Magazine.
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