Organized Power

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Organized Power is a civic engagement and community organizing project spearheaded by a small group of community activists in Portland, Oregon. The project’s primary organizers are drawn from current PortlandWiki contributors and others active in the Portland community. The project’s organizing focus is to connect individuals and groups living in particular communities with each other, and to also connect these intraconnected communities with one another.

Civic wikis play a central role in Organized Power’s organizing strategy. As the city wiki for Portland, PortlandWiki is a great example of a civic wiki. In addition to acting as a “knowledge commons” for a given community, a civic wiki can act as that community’s networking hub by linking together individuals and organizations who share common interests.

Additionally, Organized Power also focuses on identifying free or freely available technology products that individuals and groups within a given community can use to assist them with their organizing and community building efforts. In this context, Organized Power acts as a technology consultant and service provider to deploy carefully selected technologies, and train people how to make effective use of wikis and other freely available technology. The overarching goal is to assist people within the community in making use of these technologies for the purpose of bringing people together to meet, plan, communicate, collaborate, get things done and enjoy each other’s company.

Dysfunctional Communities

Organized Power organizes around the fundamental understanding that the predominant social structures currently in place are largely outdated. Many of them are rapidly transitioning from functional to dysfunctional forces in society. Topping the list of functional-to-dysfunctional social institutions are (in no particular order):

  • media
  • financial
  • political
  • educational
  • economic
  • security

Personal and Economic Security

Personal and economic security generally tops the list of concerns for most people in any given community. Any disruption in the ability to maintain adequate personal and economic security can have immediate and dire consequences. This basic understanding in mind, Organized Power puts primary organizing focus on strengthening the ability of ordinary people to adequately provide for themselves, and for communities to transition towards healthier and more community-centric social and economic operational modes.

Among ordinary working people, organized workers (those belonging to independent labor unions) are generally best positioned to maintain a certain measure of control over their personal economies. Dr. Martin Luther King remains the primary thought leader in American society in recognizing ordinary working people as potentially the leading change agents for social transformation. Like King, Organized Power views working people as having the greatest potential for driving social change.

Holistic Community

Organized Power recognizes that strong, community-based networks are key to successfully migrating away from the rapidly degrading social structures that currently prevail. Healthy and participatory community-based networks are key to transitioning towards the creation of healthier, more holistic communities. The increasing failure of legacy institutions to respond to the primary interests of ordinary people places greater responsibility on people within individual communities to create new institutional frameworks.

Similar to feudal societies, industrial social organization is characterized by hierarchical “pyramids” with control concentrated in the hands of a tiny, highly organized group at the top of the pyramid. These few at the top exercise authority over a fragmented, confused and highly disorganized base. Individuals inhabiting the middle of the pyramid are generally better organized and more privileged than those at its base. They serve as a buffer between the highly organized elite and the divided and conquered base.

In the Europe and North America, the industrial model of social organization has steadily declined for decades. In the United States, the decline arguably accelerated with the first of the “oil shocks” of the 1970s. Recent developments in resource depletion, environmental degradation and financial collapse strongly indicate that the economic models and institutions charged with maintaining order in these areas are in crisis. They apparently have lost the ability to function coherently and effectively.

As old-order industrial institutions continue their decline, new arrangements will rise to replace them. Many of the current/legacy institutional frameworks -- government, business, financial, religious and so on -- appear as if they are morphing into social arrangements that bear a strong resemblance to those that dominated pre-industrial feudalism. While it’s difficult to ascribe the precise motivations harbored by any of these legacy institutions, at least two characteristics clearly stand out: movements towards even greater and more rigid hierarchy, and extreme resource consolidation.


Editor’s note: This article is currently in ongoing development. -- WikiMaster (talk) 23:04, 29 August 2011 (UTC)

Civic Wikis and the Community

Knowledge Sharing

Community Media

Robust Grassroots Networks