Difference between revisions of "Student Liberation Action Movement"

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==STORM connection==
 
==STORM connection==
[[Lenina Nadal]] : SLAM’s [[Little Red Study Group]] brought together a group of radical teachers and community organizers: people who wanted to have a more radical nonprofit space. We decided to study Marxism seriously. We studied a lot of Mao, a little queer theory, a little feminism. That group evolved into the [[New York Study Group]], which includes former members of Standing Together to Organize a Revolutionary Movement ([[STORM]]).4 We felt a kind of identification and connection with STORM because it had the same goals around women of colour-led organization.<ref>[http://cunyadjunctproject.org/2013/02/19/a-culture-of-resistance-lessons-learned-from-the-student-liberation-action-movement/SLAM Suzy Subways]</ref>
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[[Lenina Nadal]] : SLAM’s [[Little Red Study Group]] brought together a group of radical teachers and community organizers: people who wanted to have a more radical nonprofit space. We decided to study Marxism seriously. We studied a lot of Mao, a little queer theory, a little feminism. That group evolved into the [[New York Study Group]], which includes former members of [[Standing Together to Organize a Revolutionary Movement]] ([[STORM]]).4 We felt a kind of identification and connection with STORM because it had the same goals around women of colour-led organization.<ref>[http://cunyadjunctproject.org/2013/02/19/a-culture-of-resistance-lessons-learned-from-the-student-liberation-action-movement/SLAM Suzy Subways]</ref>
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Revision as of 02:27, 8 November 2015

Template:TOCnestleft Student Liberation Action Movement was closely connected to Freedom Road Socialist Organization.

Beginnings

In March 1995, 20,000 students from City University of New York (CUNY) were attacked by police after surrounding city hall to protest a draconian tuition increase. This protest, organized by the CUNY Coalition Against the Cuts, marked an upsurge in student movement activity that continued into 1996, when the group transformed into the Student Liberation Action Movement (SLAM), a multiracial radical organization. Before disbanding in 2004, SLAM established chapters at CUNY colleges in all five boroughs of the city.[1]

SOUL connection

According to Lenina Nadal: When we started the organizer training institute, we used the School of Unity and Liberation (SOUL) curriculum.2 We recruited about 25 students a semester, and taught them organizing skills like campaign development, power analysis, public speaking, media relations and messaging, graphic design and web design. We also did political education using current events and older texts to define imperialism, patriarchy, and capitalism.[2]

STORM connection

Lenina Nadal : SLAM’s Little Red Study Group brought together a group of radical teachers and community organizers: people who wanted to have a more radical nonprofit space. We decided to study Marxism seriously. We studied a lot of Mao, a little queer theory, a little feminism. That group evolved into the New York Study Group, which includes former members of Standing Together to Organize a Revolutionary Movement (STORM).4 We felt a kind of identification and connection with STORM because it had the same goals around women of colour-led organization.[3]

References

Template:Reflist