Summer Disobedience School by Claire McDermott Keanna
The set-up of the meetings is conducive to a wide variety of people being able to attend, creating a diverse group with which to create action. As is described in Dr. Hurwitz’s work “Gender and Race in the Occupy Movement: Relational Leadership and Discriminatory Resistance”(2019), the occupy movement lended itself to a type of discriminatory activism through hostility created by movement directors. However, by the Summer Disobedience School occurring in a spatially-diverse series of parks on weekends (accommodating to those that hold weekday jobs) free of charge, individuals from all walks of life were able to participate, lending a wider variety of perspectives and tactics to action.
Furthermore, the individuals behind Summer Disobedience School created a Facebook page for the initiative (which is still active and can be found here). The page contains details on events, photos from gatherings, and posted articles from the organizers as recently as 2016. This type of digital centralization allowed individuals unable to make the meetings the ability to see what was going on as well as be connected to articles and issues after the meeting series had ended. Considering the newness of Facebook at the time of the beginnings of the Occupy movement in 2012, the group creating a page was a smart utilization of a relatively novel way of organizing and shows their willingness to expand their activism beyond traditional gatherings.
-Claire Keanna, CWRU Class of 2022