Closing the Gap: Grassroots Organizing and Policy Making for Housing in Canada (Broadbent Institute)
Tenant organizing is often framed as a reactive force, sparked by crisis, but organizers also argue that the real strength of the housing justice movement lies in their proactive, long-term approach. Organizing can build durable networks that can respond to immediate threats like evictions or rent increases while, at the same time, pushing for broader systemic change.
One of the challenges in the fight for housing justice is aligning the decentralized, dynamic energy of tenants organizing with the policy strategies of institutional actors. While tenant unions and grassroots organizations often respond to crises such as evictions, rent hikes, and landlord intimidation, other tenant-related organizations like legal clinics, academic institutions, and other adjacent non-profit groups tend to work with longer timelines, formal processes, and policy interventions. These rhythms don’t always align, but when they do, the results can be transformative ...
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