The Citizen's Handbook is a website with a collection of guides for activists.
Also check out our list of other websites for activists.
Not to be confused with:
The video series The Citizen's Handbook by Radio New Zealand, an educational comedy series on civic issues.
The book, The Citizen's Handbook: Civics in Action by Bethany Poore on the United States political system.
About the Citizen's Handbook
The website discusses how to organize a community. It has a list of topics such as how to get people together, how to lead meetings, how to fundraise, how to communicate without violence, how to resolve conflicts, and how to create a community project. The Citizen's Handbook also has resources such as books and articles on building democracy and media advocacy. There are also links to other online resources.
Table of contents
Horizontal Engagement
Getting Together
Preventing Grassroots Rot
Creating a Community Project
Projects that Convene People
Vertical Engagement
Making the News
Confrontation 101
Large Scale Tactics
Resources
Books
Articles
Links
History
The first print edition of the Citizens Handbook (cover above) was produced in 1995 as part of a project led by a remarkable woman, Chris Warren, who was then working in the Social Planning Department of the City of Vancouver. She gathered a group of citizens together to talk about the effects of aging under the heading of Ready or Not. As a result of these discussions, she shifted the whole project towards what participants were really interested in: How to organize their own neighbourhoods. Chris Warren received a lot of flak from city administrators and politicians, even though the first addition of the Citizens Handbook recommended many ways that citizens could work cooperatively with city government.
A year later, The Vancouver CommunityNet put up the first web edition of the Citizens Handbook, making it the first complete grassroots organizing guide on the web. Soon, everyone began using The Handbook for everything. Google, in a cheeky move, ranked the new site higher than the huge US Citizens Handbook site which listed all the services provided by the US government. Ralph Nader's site, Public Citizen, then adopted the Handbook as its grassroots organizing guide. The Handbook helped Germans address a serious pollution issue, educators in New York a serious funding issue; and oceanographers in the US trying to change public policy to protect sea life. More recently it has been used extensively by citizens in the Ukraine.
In 2003, New Society Publishers published a revised version of the Handbook titled The Troublemakers Teaparty, A Manual for Effective Citizen Action.
Over the years the focus of the Handbook has changed. It still emphasizes working cooperatively with government, because democratic government remains the best ally of citizens. But confrontational tactics have been added because governments are often slow to respond or, obsessed with control, refuse to respond. They continue to recommend cooperation before confrontation. And they recommend a genuine attempt to see an issue from the point of view of those whose difficult job is to address public interest issues.
Licence
The Citizens Handbook can be shared, redistributed, modified and incorporated into other websites and publications under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.