Академический Документы
Профессиональный Документы
Культура Документы
Case Neg
Notes
This is a file that is more policy oriented in dealing with this affirmative so I didnt
include the links to more critical arguments. In the 1nc you should make a choice
between running the econ DA and framework but probably not both. The reason
being if you run the counter advocacy as a counterplan and then run framework you
can have framework be the net benefit to the counterplan. Also, the framework
shell is pretty long and so is all the solvency so keep that in mind. I think the better
strategy though is to do case, the counter advocacy, and the DA because then you
can make the argument that the DA is a prior question (in the 2nc part of the file)
because in order to reach the endpoint of their solvency, we need to survive the
economic collapse. That means that they dont get to just weigh the DA against the
case but have to win that it wont happen for them to reach case. Even if they do
you have a good chance of winning on the DA as net benefits to the counter
advocacy because it probably solves. Good luck!
1NC
Case
1. Neoliberalism solves global inequality
Obhof. 03. University of florida journal of law and public policy: Why globalizationA look at global capitalism and its effects. 15, : 91
Many in the anti-globalization camp have focused their efforts on rising tensions
within, rather than between, countries. They argue that the rich and the poor
are drifting farther apart, and that violence between classes of people within the
same country is increasing. Noting that economic groups often tend to break
down along ethnic lines, some have even postulated that the spread of freemarket democracy fosters "ethnoeconomic resentment" to the point of
conflagration. n171 On their collective face, these arguments appear to have
some merit. Intrastate war is now the [*121] predominant form of armed
conflict. n172 In the last decade, civil wars "have scarred the world's poorest
countries, leaving a legacy of more than five million dead, many more driven
from their homes, billions of dollars in resources destroyed, and wasted
economic opportunity." n173 Is the spread of global capitalism responsible for
these atrocities? The answer is likely no. Such analyses often overlook more
obvious sources of backlash: elite behavior, corruption, and latent ethnic,
nationalist, and religious tensions. n174 They also ignore historical and
economic realities. As discussed above, there is no correlation between
globalization and increased inequality within countries - in fact, the opposite is
true. Furthermore, the risk factors most closely correlated with civil war include
the share of GDP coming from the export of primary commodities, geography,
recent conflicts, economic opportunities, and ethnic and religious composition.
n175 Since the end of the Cold War, conflict has been concentrated in countries
with little education and economic decline. n176 Intrastate conflict is
systematically related to low national income n177 and a lack of economic
opportunities, n178 but not inequality. n179 Unequal societies are simply not
more prone to conflict than more egalitarian ones. Given the importance of
economic opportunity in preventing conflict, and the unequivocally positive
results of increased trade and foreign investment, it seems that global
capitalism is a potential cure, rather than a cause, of internal conflict. In fact,
internal pressures appear to be greater [*122] in countries that have not
become more globalized in recent years. Whatever the merits of this latter
claim, though, the assertion that globalization has increased internal conflict is
simply not supported by the facts.
the manner, for example, of the family wage. This, indeed, is one of the demands of
Obama's progressive Christian supporters, E. J. Dionne, and is one obvious direction
in which demands for a living wage or basic income might unfold. Rather, we are
interested in pushing the exercise in excess even further, in praise of a usurious
economy from below that would begin with the most intimate of acts while breaking
beyond their normative sexual and racial boundaries. Briefly put, how is it possible
to live on borrowed time, to extend credit to oneself and others, while defaulting on
the contractual arrangements one might have with the creditor? This is not an
instance of declaring what is to be done, but of noting what is already
occurring.
Counter advocacy
They advocate for a politics of brokenness which precludes the
idea of a living wage or free-market jobs.
Thus our Counter advocacy text: we advocate a government
ensured living wage and that the government should support
three separate programs for increasing employment: direct
public sector employment, job training with job placement, and
wage subsidies for employers who hire unemployed workers.
The living wage succeeds in bringing disadvantaged
populations particularly people of color out of poverty.
Creates structural trends away from cyclical poverty.
Bryce Covert 13, 6-21-2013, "How Raising The Minimum Wage Is A Racial Justice
Issue," ThinkProgress, http://thinkprogress.org/economy/2013/06/21/2194701/raceminimum-wage/
Three and a half million people of color would be lifted out of poverty if Congress
raised the minimum wage to $10.10, according to a new report from the restaurant
workers group ROC United. They would be the majority of the six million people
overall who would be lifted out of poverty. People of color are far more likely to work
minimum wage jobs, as they represent 42 percent of those earners even though
they make up just 32 percent of the workforce. That big number is in large part
thanks to the overrepresentation of people of color in low-wage restaurant industry
jobs. Over 500,000 of those lifted out of poverty by a raise in the minimum wage
would be restaurant workers, 300,000 of whom would be workers of color.
Restaurants are the single largest employer of people of color, but they are
disproportionately concentrated in the lowest paying positions. As the report notes,
Two of the lowest-paying jobs, dishwashers and fast food preps and cooks, are 59%
and 35% people of color, and earn a median wage of $8.78 and $8.85, respectively.
Forty percent of tipped workers who make an even lower minimum wage of $2.13
are people of color. The people of color who hold these jobs are also more likely
to live in poverty. They make up more than half of tipped workers and restaurant
workers with incomes below the poverty line. Women of color fare even worse.
Black female servers, for example, are paid only 60 percent of what all male
servers are paid, the report notes. The minimum wage has fallen far below its
historical borrowing power. The current wage would be $10.40 if it had been indexed
to inflation at its peak in 1968. House Democrats introduced a bill in March that
would raise the minimum wage to $10.10 an hour and index it to inflation so that it
would continue to rise.
is clear. But, by looking beyond the impact of our federal minimum wage on
individuals and their families, we see that the wage standard also has systemic
consequences, most notably its disproportionate effect on people of color. For
instance, African-Americans, Asians and Hispanics constitute 42 percent of
minimum wage workers, while representing only 32 percent of the U.S. workforce.
By earning dismal minimum wage salaries in higher numbers, communities of color
continue to be cut out of fundamental opportunities for equality. People of color
make up a majority of those living below the poverty level, while the median wealth
of white households remains twenty times that of Black homes and 18 times that of
Hispanic homes. This severe wealth inequality directly limits minority access
to quality education, transportation and afordable housing, while
perpetuating the disproportionately high number of people of color
involved in the criminal justice system.
The effects of the proposed program are likely to be felt for several years after it is
phased out. Researchers find that positive economic effects last for many years
after temporary jobs programs end (Bartik 2001: 141146). Positive experiences
with African American workers may also reduce employer biases, possibly
leading them to institutionalize the outreach and hiring of African
American workers (Bartik 2001, 14146). Studies of public sector employment
programs find that employers are surprised to find that workers from disadvantaged
groups can perform as well as the workers they usually hire (Bartik 2001, 17980).
This jobs proposal is designed to increase the overall economic resources in the
community. Increasing the number of working and taxpaying individuals would
increase the tax base for additional economic development activities while also
decreasing local government social service and social welfare costs. It would make
the community more appealing for locating a business. The proposal is also
designed to increase the attractiveness of the community to middle-class
households looking for a new place to live as well as to both new and existing
businesses. Significant growth in employment rates could also lead to increases in
the educational achievement of the children in the community and reductions in
crime. These improvements would attract more middle-class residents and further
increase the economic resources of the community.
taking, at all times a history of capitalism and given that debt also signifies a promise of ownership but never
During the first few weeks of 2012, the markets are following the prevailing
narrative that the U.S. economy has decoupled from the widely known troubles of
Europe, and the somewhat less discussed prevailing risks from China. In a
decoupling scenario, a country or region is deemed to be able to withstand the
troubles going on outside of its own borders because of its own internal economic
strength. I see two major problems with this thesis. First, the U.S. economy is not
growing at the recently predicted robust rate of 4-5%; rather it is struggling to
achieve a rate of 2-2.5%. This leaves little cushion to withstand the contagion
from a major economic fallout from either Europe or China, or for that matter,
economic shocks that have yet to surface. A significant European debt default,
banking failure, natural disasters or geopolitical events, would surely impact the
U.S. economy and markets beyond the current level of fragile growth we simply
dont have the levels of productivity requisite to absorb a major blow. Second, it
was only a few years ago when the decoupling thesis was widely espoused following
the U.S. banking crisis and ensuing recession. At the time the thinking was that the
robust growth experienced in the emerging markets would be able to withstand the
U.S. slowdown and pick up some of the slack in the global economy. We now know
how that worked out it didnt! When the U.S. went into a major recession it
dragged down the rest of the world with it. We need to deal with it the
global economy remains highly interdependent. If a number of dominoes begin to
fall, it is highly unlikely that any individual country or region will be able to escape
the carnage. Again, any financial crisis would be occurring from levels of growth
that have not yet fully recovered from their recessionary lows. In relative terms,
some countries and regions will do better than others, but the decoupling thesis is
highly flawed
and Iran or India and Pakistan, have potential religious dimensions. Short of war,
tensions such as those related to immigration might become unbearable. Familiar
issues of creed and identity could be exacerbated. One way or another, the secular
rational approach would be sidestepped by a return to theocratic absolutes,
competing or converging with secular absolutes such as unbridled nationalism.
Fwk
Our interpretation is that an affirmative should defend
curtailing federal government surveillance as the endpoint of
their advocacy. This does not mandate roleplaying, immediate
fiat or any particular means of impact calculus.
Surveillance can only be understood in relation to the agent
doing the surveying understanding federal government
surveillance as unique is key or the topic becomes abstract
and unlimited
Cetina 14
(DANIEL K. CETINA, BALANCING SECURITY AND PRIVACY IN 21ST CENTURYAMERICA: A
FRAMEWORK FOR FISA COURT REFORM, 47 J. Marshall L. Rev. 1453 2013-2014, Hein)
This is the year of what should be a decisive debate on our countrys spending and
debt. But our political debates seldom deserve the name. For the most
part representatives of the rival parties exchange one-liners: The rich can afford to
pay more is met by Tax increases kill jobs. Slightly more sophisticated
discussions may cite historical precedents: There were higher tax rates during the
post-war boom versus Reagans tax cuts increased revenues.
Such volleys still dont even amount to arguments: they dont put forward generally
accepted premises that support a conclusion. Full-scale speeches by politicians are
seldom much more than collections of such slogans and factoids, hung on a string
of platitudes. Despite the name, candidates pre-election debates are exercises in
looking authoritative, imposing their talking points on the questions, avoiding
gaffes, and embarrassing their opponents with zingers (the historic paradigm:
There you go again.).
There is a high level of political discussion in the editorials and op-eds of national
newspapers and magazines as well as on a number of blogs, with positions often
carefully formulated and supported with argument and evidence. But even here we
could be easily arranged, but personal encounters are more vivid and will better
engage public attention. They should not, however, be merely
extemporaneous events, where too much will depend on quick-thinking
and an engaging manner. We want remarks to be carefully prepared
find power everywhere and hope nowhere, and seem to offer wellmeaning policy makers little more than a prescription for
despair.
Returning to the topics already discussed, let us consider some ways in which Surveillance Studies might benefit from dialogue with law.
Let us return first to the problem of digitally-enhanced surveillance by law enforcementthe problem of the high-resolution mosaic. As discussed in the section above, works by Surveillance Studies scholars exploring issues of mobility and control offer profound insights into the
ways in which continual observation shapes spaces and subjectivitiesthe precise questions about which, as we have already seen, judges and legal scholars alike are skeptical. Such works reveal the extent to which pervasive surveillance of public spaces is emerging as a new
and powerful mode of ordering the public and social life of civil society. They offer rich food for thoughtbut not for action. Networked surveillance is increasingly a fact of contemporary public life, and totalizing theories about its power dont take us very far toward gaining
To put the point a different way, the networked democratic society and the totalitarian state may be points on a continuum rather than binary opposites, but the fact that the continuum exists is still worth something. If so, one needs tools for assessment
and as
culture in a number of complementary ways. First and most basically, many legal writings on information privacy are important as primary sources that reveal the notice-and-choice paradigm and the narrative of inevitable innovation at work. But there is also a rich vein of legal
scholarship interrogating the assumptions and the politics that underlie privacy and data protection regulation (e.g., Cohen 2012a, 2012c, 2013, 2015; Kerr 2013; Ohm 2010; Solove 2013). In addition, legal scholars have produced richly detailed and revealing investigations of
regulatory and compliance processes; for example, scholars concerned with the operation of surveillant assemblages and digital enclosures ought to read and consider the important work by Kenneth Bamberger and Deirdre Mulligan on corporate privacy compliance cultures
(2011a, 2011b).
far has not been particularly well-adapted to helping policymakers figure out what,
if anything, to do about evolving practices of commercial surveillance. Once again,
An initial set of questions concerns how to redefine privacy and data protection in functional terms that do not presuppose the stable, liberal self, and that instead offer real benefit to the situated subjects who might claim their protection. David Lyon (2001) has argued that the
organizing concepts of privacy and data protection are inadequate to comprehend surveillance as a mode of social ordering. From a sociological perspective that is undoubtedly right, but privacy and data protection still might be made effective as legal constructs if articulated
differently, in ways that correspond more closely to the ways that surveillance shapes experience. That project calls for the sort of theoretical cannibalization that makes Ph.D. committees in Real Disciplines nervous, but at which legal scholars excel. With some trepidation, I offer
my own work on privacy as boundary management for the postliberal self (Cohen 2012a, 2013), as well as Valerie Steeves (2009) work on relational subjectivity, as examples of the sort of exercise that is necessary to reframe the effects of surveillance as social ordering in ways to
which legal systems can respond. For law to develop a sustainable and effective approach to regulating data protection and protecting privacy, the ways of theorizing about the subject represented by these projects must become second nature, not only for scholars but also and
more importantly for legislatures, regulators, and courts. That in turn requires second process of translation, from the language of academia into a vernacular that can supply inputs into policy processes.
A second set of questions concerns how to understand what constitutes privacy harm in an era in which some surveillance is a constant. To the Surveillance Studies reader this may seem to be a variation on the first question, but it is different: in law, harm is what makes violation
of an interest actionable, and the potential for harm is what creates the predicate for comprehensive regulation of particular domains of activity. Harm need not be individualized or monetizable; environmental regulations and financial market regulations address systemic and often
nonmonetizable risk. But it must be reasonably definite; talk of power, power everywhere is plainly insufficient and it should come as no surprise that policymakers find it risible. Work on this problem is still preliminary, but here legal scholarship has a leg up because it deals in
practicalities. Surveillance Studies scholars might profitably read works by Danielle Citron (2007) and Paul Ohm (2010) that identify and name the systemic risks associated with leaky and largely unregulated data reservoirs, and that draw on resources ranging from the history of
tort law to computational science to craft recommendations for more effective regulatory strategies.
A final set of questions concerns the design of governance mechanisms. As we have already seen, the flows of surveillance within social media create novel institutional design challenges. In the domain of commercial profiling, many activities on the business-facing side of personal
information markets, removed from consumer-facing processes that purport to ensure notice and choice, have eluded regulatory scrutiny entirely. Some of the classic works on privacy governance originate within the Surveillance Studies tradition; these include Priscilla Regans
(1995) study of the way privacy legislation emerges within the U.S. political system and Colin Bennett and Charles Raabs (2006) work on privacy governance and the emergence of data protection as a regulatory paradigm. But the question of governance badly needs to be
revisited; in particular, Surveillance Studies scholars have not yet engaged with the new privacy governance now emerging as official policy in the U.S. (and as de facto policy in the European Union) in a sustained and meaningful way. Works by legal scholars on the political,
epistemological, and normative dimensions of the new governance (e.g., Bamberger 2010; Cohen 2012b, 2013; Freeman 2000; Lobel 2004) offer starting points for an inquiry that moves beyond doing Surveillance Studies to consider the more pressing challenge of doing
surveillance regulation wisely and effectively.
Conclusion: Doing Law-and-Surveillance-Studies Differently
The prospects for fruitful interchange and collaboration between legal scholars and Surveillance Studies scholars are likely to remain complicated by pronounced differences in underlying theoretical orientation. But since Surveillance Studies is itself an interdiscipline (Garber 2001),
to reunite with relatives living abroad all present unique challenges. Add in factors such as gender, sexual orientation, age, and disability, and the problems become
even more complex. n45 Angela Harris echoes this observation by pointing out how some feminist legal theory assumes "a unitary, 'essential' women's experience
[that] can be isolated and described independently of race, class, sexual orientation, and other realities of experience." n460 The same might be said of the "people,"
which, like the "working class," may be too broad. Other categorizations--such as "low-income workers," "immigrants", and the "poor", for example--may be too narrow
to have the social weight to fundamentally transform society. In practice, progressive lawyers orient to the politically advanced among these various "communities." In
so doing, then, we need to acknowledge that we are organizing on the basis of political ideology, and not simply geography, identity or class. Building the strongest
possible mass movement, therefore, requires an orientation not only towards certain "subordinated" communities, but to the politically advanced generally. Otherwise,
we may be undermining activism writ large. This is not to denigrate autonomous community efforts. As I have mentioned, subordinated communities of course have the
right to self-determination, i.e. to organize separately. But the point is not simply to organize groups of people who experience a particular oppression, but rather to
identify those who have the social power to transform society. Arguing that these agents are the collective, multi-racial working class, Smith explains: The Marxist
definition of the working class has little in common with those of sociologists. Neither income level nor self-definition are [sic] what determine social class. Although
income levels obviously bear some relationship to class, some workers earn the same or higher salaries than some people who fall into the category of middle class.
And many people who consider themselves "middle [*192] class" are in fact workers. Nor is class defined by categories such as white and blue collar. For Marx the
working class is defined by its relationship to the means of production. Broadly speaking, those who do not control the means of production and are forced to sell their
labor power to capitalists are workers. n461 The practical consequence of this very well may be that we redefine who we represent as clients and consider activism or
potential activism outside subordinated communities, for example union activity and alternative political-party building, as part of our work.
3. From Movementism to Political Organization
leadership, in turn, requires work not often associated with "activism," such as, for example, theoretical study. n462 "Movementism," n463 by which I mean the
conviction that building a mass movement is the answer to oppression and exploitation, has its limitations. Even though activism itself is perhaps the best school for
fundamental social
transformation will only come about if there are political organizations
clear enough, motivated enough, experienced enough, large enough,
embedded enough and agile enough to respond to the twists and
turns endemic in any struggle for power. "The problem," as Bellow
astutely observed, "is not our analytic weaknesses, but the opportunistic,
strategic, and political character of our subject." n464 Such opportunities typically occur when there
political education, we have an enormous amount to learn from our predecessors. In the final analysis,
is a confluence of three factors: a social crisis; a socio-economic elite that finds itself divided over how to overcome it; and a powerful mass movement from below. As I
is
Conclusion
Client activism is not a monolithic, mechanical object. Most of the time, it is neither the gathering mass movement many of us wish for, nor the inert, atomized few in
need of external, professional motivation. Rather, activism is a phenomenon in constant ebb and flow, a [*193] mercurial, fluid complex shaped by an unremitting
diversity of factors. The key through the maze of lawyering advice and precaution is therefore to take a hard, sober look at the overarching state of activism. Are our
clients in fact active or are they not? How many are and who are they? What is the nature of this period? Economically? Politically? Culturally? What are the defining
issues? What political and organizing trends can be discerned? With which organizations are our clients active, if any? What demands are they articulating, and how are
they articulating them?
In essence, I am arguing for the elaboration of a systematic macropolitical analysis in progressive lawyering theory. Here, my purpose is not to present a comprehensive
set of political considerations, but rather to develop a framework for, and to investigate the limitations of, present considerations in three areas: strategic aims;
prevailing social conditions; and methods of activism. Consciously or not, admittedly or not, informed and systematic or not, progressive lawyers undertake their work
with certain assumptions, perspectives and biases. Progressive lawyering theory would be a much more effective and concrete guide to action--to defining the lawyer's
role in fostering activism--if it would elaborate on these considerations and transform implicit and perhaps delimited assumptions and approaches into explicit and
hopefully broader choices.
Over the past four decades, there has been remarkable continuity and consistency in progressive lawyers' use of litigation, legislation, direct services, education and
organizing to stimulate and support client activism. The theoretical "breaks" to which Buchanan has referred n465 have not been so much about the practice of
lawyering itself, but rather about unarticulated shifts in ultimate goals, societal analyses, and activist priorities, each necessitated by changes in the social, economic,
and political context. That simply is another way of stating the obvious: that progressive lawyers change their practices to adapt to changing circumstances. The
recurrent problem in progressive lawyering theory is that many commentators have tended to generalize these practice changes to apply across social circumstances.
In so doing, they displace and often replace more fundamental differences over strategic goals, interpretation of social contexts, and organizing priorities with debates
over the mechanics of lawyering practice.
The argument is turned on its head: we often assume or tend to [*194] assume agreement over the meanings and underlying conceptual frameworks relating to
"fundamental social change," current political analysis, and "community organizing," and debate lawyering strategy and tactics; but instead we should be elaborating
and clarifying these threshold political considerations as a prerequisite to using what we ultimately agree to be a broad and flexible set of lawyering tools. In effect, the
various approaches to lawyering have become the currency by which scholars have debated politics and activism. The irony is that our disagreements are less about
lawyering approaches per se, I believe, than they are about our ultimate political objectives, our analyses of contemporary opportunities, and our views of the optimal
paths from the latter to the former. The myriad lawyering descriptions and prescriptions progressive lawyering theory offers are of limited use unless they are anchored
in these primary considerations. How do we decide if we should subscribe to "rebellious" and not traditional "public interest" lawyering, for example, or "collaborative"
over "critical" lawyering, if we do not interrogate these questions and instead rush too quickly into practical questions? The differences among these approaches matter
precisely because they have different political goals, are based on different political analyses, and employ different political activist strategies.
Activist lawyers already engage in these analyses--necessarily so. To foster client activism, they must read prevailing social conditions and strategize with their clients
about the political next step, often with an eye toward a long-term goal. But I don't think we necessarily engage in these analyses as consciously, or with as full a
picture of the history and dynamics involved or options available, as we could. Often this is because there simply isn't time to engage these questions. Or perhaps not
wanting to dominate our clients, we squelch our own political analysis and agenda to allow for organic, indigenous leadership from below. But if we are truly
collaborative--and when we feel strongly enough about certain political issues--we engage on issues and argue them out. In either event, we undertake an unsystematic
engagement of these fundamental issues at our peril.
We do not need to win that the state is good, rather just that
the value of the state is something that should be debated
about. This is the screen you should adopt for the Afs ev it cant
just say that the state is bad or inefective, their ev has to say that
the state should not even be discussed. General indictments of the
state can be done on the neg, while still preserving limited and
Nevertheless, in contrast to what Steve Bachmann has called the [*116] "alegal" or "crude Marxist" approach, n19 progressive activists recognize that the
legal arena remains a forum for social struggle. n20 This is so for three reasons:
First, activists often do not have a choice but to work within the legal
system, as when they are arrested or otherwise prevented from
engaging in activism by state authorities. Second, because law is
relatively autonomous from economic and political interests, n21 campaigns for
legal reform can win substantial gains and are frequently the only
vehicles through which more far-reaching change takes shape;
struggles for reform, in other words, beget more radical possibilities and
aspirations. n22 And third, law is constitutive of the social order. Law--or,
more accurately, the concept of it--is not (again as some crude analysts would
argue) simply a tool of one ruling class or other, but rather an essential component
of a just society. n23
Commentators observe that lawyers who base their practice on these three
premises are "hungry for theory," n24 for theory checks the "occupational hazards
[of] reformism or cynicism." n25 The theoretical project is thus a dialectic: while law
reform alone cannot "disturb the basic political and economic organization of
modern American society," n26 [*117] law and lawyering are "a complex,
must recognize the limitations of the legal system and learn to use
that to the advantage of the oppressed. If lawyers are going to support work that dismantles
oppressive structures, we must radically rethink the roles we can play in building and supporting these movements and acknowledge that
our own individual interests or even livelihood may conflict with doing radical and transformative work. n162 A. Community Organizing for
Social Justice When we use the term community organizing or organizing, we refer to the activities of organizations engaging in basebuilding and leadership development of communities directly impacted by one or more social [*612] problems and conducting direct action
issue campaigns intended to make positive change related to the problem(s). In this article, we discuss community organizing in the context
of progressive social change, but community-organizing strategies can also be used for conservative ends. Community organizing is a
powerful means to make social change. A basic premise of organizing is that inappropriate imbalances of power in society are a central
component of social injustice. In order to have social justice, power relationships must shift. In Organizing for Social Change: Midwest
Academy Manual for Activists (hereinafter, "the Manual"), n163 the authors list three principles of community organizing: n164 (1) winning
real, immediate, concrete improvements in people's lives; (2) giving people a sense of their own power; and (3) altering the relations of
power. n165 Before any of these principles can be achieved it is necessary to have leadership by the people impacted by social problems.
n166 As Rinku Sen points out: [E]ven allies working in solidarity with affected groups cannot rival the clarity and power of the people who
have the most to gain and the least to lose . . . organizations composed of people whose lives will change when a new policy is instituted
tend to set goals that are harder to reach, to compromise less, and to stick out a fight longer. n167 She also notes that, "[I]f we are to make
policy proposals that are grounded in reality and would make a difference either in peoples' lives or in the debate, then we have to be in
touch with the people who are at the center of such policies. n168 We believe community organizing has the potential to make fundamental
social change that law reform strategies or "movements" led by lawyers cannot achieve on their own. However, community organizing is not
always just and effective. Community-organizing groups are not immune to any number of problems that can impact other organizations,
including internal oppressive dynamics. In fact, some strains of white, male-dominated [*613] community organizing have been widely
criticized as perpetuating racism and sexism. n169 Nonetheless, models of community organizing, particularly as revised by women of color
and other leaders from marginalized groups, have much greater potential to address fundamental imbalances of power than law reform
strategies. They also have a remarkable record of successes. Tools from community organizers can help show where other strategies can fit
into a framework for social change. The authors of the Manual, for example, describe various strategies for addressing social issues and
illustrate how each of them may, at least to some extent, be effective. n170 They then plot out various forms of making social change on a
continuum in terms of their positioning with regard to existing social power relationships. n171 They place direct services at the end of the
spectrum that is most accepting of existing power relationships and community organizing at the end of the spectrum that most challenges
existing power relationships. n172 Advocacy organizations are listed in the middle, closer to community organizing than direct services.
n173 The Four Pillars of Social Justice Infrastructure model, a tool of the Miami Workers Center, is somewhat more nuanced than the Manual.
n174 According to this model, four "pillars" are the key to transformative social justice. n175 They are (1) the pillar of service, which
addresses community needs and stabilizes community members' lives; (2) the pillar of policy, which changes policies and institutions and
achieves concrete gains with benchmarks for progress; (3) the pillar of consciousness, which alters public opinion and shifts political
parameters through media advocacy and popular education; and (4) the pillar of power, which achieves autonomous community power
through base-building and leadership development. n176 According to the Miami Workers Center, all of these pillars are essential in making
social change, but the pillar of power is most crucial in the struggle to win true liberation for all oppressed communities. n177 [*614] In
their estimation, our movements suffer when the pillar of power is forgotten and/or not supported by the other pillars, or when the pillars
are seen as separate and independent, rather than as interconnected, indispensable aspects of the whole infrastructure that is necessary to
build a just society. n178 Organizations with whom we work are generally dedicated solely to providing services, changing policies, or
providing public education. Unfortunately, each of these endeavors exists separate from one another and perhaps most notably, separate
from community organizing. In SRLP's vision of change, this separation is part of maintaining structural capitalism that seeks to maintain
imbalances of power in our society. Without incorporating the pillar of power, service provision, policy change, and public education can
never move towards real social justice. n179 B. Lawyering for Empowerment In the past few decades, a number of alternative theories have
emerged that help lawyers find a place in social movements that do not replicate oppression. n180 Some of the most well-known iterations
of this theme are "empowerment lawyering," "rebellious lawyering," and "community lawyering." n181 These perspectives share skepticism
of the efficacy of impact litigation and traditional direct services for improving the conditions faced by poor clients and communities of color,
because they do not and cannot effectively address the roots of these forms of oppression. n182 Rather, these alternative visions of
lawyering center on the empowerment of community members and organizations, the elimination of the potential for dependency on
lawyers and the legal system, and the collaboration between lawyers and directly impacted communities in priority setting. n183 Of the
many models of alternative lawyering with the goal of social justice, we will focus on the idea of "lawyering for empowerment," generally.
The goal of empowerment lawyering is to enable a group of people to gain control of the forces that affect their lives. n184 Therefore
Lawyering for empowerment means not relying solely on legal expertise for
using
our knowledge and expertise to help disenfranchised communities
take leadership. If community organizing is the path to social justice and
decisionmaking. It means recognizing the limitations of the legal system, and
"organizing is about people taking a role in determining their own future and
improving the quality of life not only for themselves but for everyone," then "the
primary goal [of empowerment lawyering] is building up the community." n186
C. Sharing Information and Building Leadership
with clients so that they can bring power and voice back to their
communities and perhaps fight against the system, become
politicized, and take leadership. "This demands that the lawyer undo
the secret wrappings of the legal system and share the essence of legal
advocacy--doing so lessens the mystical power of the lawyer, and, in practice,
enriches the advocate in the sharing and developing of rightful power."
n188
Lawyers have many opportunities to share knowledge and skills as a form of leadership development. This sharing can be accomplished, for
example, through highly collaborative legal representation, through community clinics, through skill-shares, or through policy or campaign
meetings where the lawyer explains what they know about the existing structures and fills in gaps and questions raised by activists about
the workings of legal systems.
D. Helping to Meet Survival Needs
SRLP sees our work as building legal services and policy change that directly supports the pillar of power. n189 Maintaining an awareness of
the limitations and pitfalls of traditional legal services, we strive to provide services in a larger context and with an approach that can help
support libratory work. n190 For this reason we provide direct legal services but also work toward leadership development in our
communities and a deep level of support for our community-organizing allies.
Our approach in this regard is to make sure our community members access and obtain all of the benefits to which they are entitled under
the law, and to protect our community members as much as possible from the criminalization, discrimination, and harassment they face
when attempting to live their lives. While we do not believe that the root causes keeping our clients in poverty and poor health can be
addressed in this way, we also believe that our clients experience the most severe impact from state policies and practices and need and
2NC
Counter Advocacy
Solves debt
Solves debt - liquidity and economic freedom
Standing 13 [Guy professor of development studies @ School of Oriental and
African Studies, in London] [Unconditional Basic Income: Two pilots in Madhya
Pradesh] (http://tinyurl.com/qayj2hm) (accessed 7-27-15) //MC
Economic activity, work and production Contrary to a common criticism of cash
transfers, cash grants were associated with an increase in labour and work. Cash
grant households were twice as likely to have increased their production work as
non-transfer households. Cash grants led to an increase in own-account work, and a
relative switch from wage labour to own-account farming and small-scale business.
This was especially true for scheduled caste households and for women workers.
The shift from labour to own farm work was especially marked in the tribal villages.
Many families used cash grants to buy small items for production, such as sewing
machines and seeds and fertiliser. Cash grants were associated with the purchase
of more livestock to increase production. Households in the cash-grant tribal village
increased their livestock by 70%. Cash grant households more likely to increase
their income from work, in spite of it being a difficult year due to weather
conditions in the area. Cash grant households were three times as likely to start
a new business or production activity as others, with a majority attributing that to
the cash grants. In tribal village, farmers have increased their spending in good
quality seeds, fertilisers and pesticides. Debt and Savings Severe indebtedness was
found in over three-quarters of all households. Cash grants were associated
with a significant reduction in indebtedness, both because recipients used the
money to reduce existing debt and because they used the money to avoid going
into further debt. Those receiving cash grants were more than twice as likely to
reduce debt. Cash grants led to a significant increase in savings, even in
households with debt. Households often used the money to give themselves vital
liquidity.
Jobs Solvency
Jobs are a solid way to improve the economic conditions of
some African American communities. Bad economic conditions
are the reason for high crime rates and bad educational
outcomes
Algernon Austin 11, 12-14-2011, "A jobs-centered approach to African American
community development: The crisis of African American unemployment requires
federal intervention," Economic Policy Institute,
http://www.epi.org/publication/bp328-african-american-unemployment/
Millions of African Americans live in communities that lack access to good jobs and
good schools and suffer from high crime rates. African American adults are about
twice as likely to be unemployed as whites, black students lag their white peers in
educational attainment and achievement, and African American communities
tend to have higher than average crime rates. These issues have been
persistent problems. Jobs are essential to improving African American
communities. Increased employment would help people in these
communities lift themselves out of poverty. In addition, because poor
economic conditions are an important causal factor behind poor
educational outcomes and high crime rates are correlated with high
unemployment rates, creating job opportunities would help improve educational
outcomes and reduce crime. This paper outlines a plan for significantly increasing
the number of jobs available to African Americans. The plan, which targets
communities with persistently high unemployment, includes three main
components: creation of public sector jobs, job training with job-placement
programs, and wage subsidies for employers. Although the plan is constructed with
African Americans in mind, it would also provide benefits to Latino, American Indian,
and white communities in which unemployment has remained high.1
General Solvency
Our advocacy solves for unemployment in these communities
Algernon Austin 11, 12-14-2011, "A jobs-centered approach to African American
community development: The crisis of African American unemployment requires
federal intervention," Economic Policy Institute,
http://www.epi.org/publication/bp328-african-american-unemployment/
Given the intractability of high joblessness for African Americans, the federal
government should support targeted job creation for communities experiencing
persistently high unemployment. Job creation should be targeted to communities of
25,000 people or more in counties and metropolitan areas that have experienced
unemployment of more than 6 percent every year in the previous 10 years. Eligible
individuals must have resided in an eligible community for a prolonged period and
have been unemployed or out of the labor market for at least six months. The
program could be phased out in communities over a five-year period after the
annual unemployment rate fell below 6 percent. The proposed program is at a
scale large enough to produce a significant reduction in unemployment. It
is likely to improve communities plagued by persistent high
unemployment in other ways, as well.
Unemployment = no edu
Joblessness in communities of color has negative efects on
childrens education.
Algernon Austin 11, 12-14-2011, "A jobs-centered approach to African American
community development: The crisis of African American unemployment requires
federal intervention," Economic Policy Institute,
http://www.epi.org/publication/bp328-african-american-unemployment/
Parental unemployment, and not simply low income, has negative effects on
childrens educational outcomes. Blacks are twice as likely as whites to have had 10
or more spells of unemployment over their prime working years. Joblessness,
although by no means the only factor producing higher crime rates in African
American communities, appears to play a significant role. Neither educational
advances nor suburbanization by blacks has translated into reductions in
the blackwhite unemployment rate ratio. If a bold new approach is not
developed to address the racial unemployment disparity, it is likely that African
Americans will be condemned to unemployment rates that are twice those of whites
into the foreseeable future. This paper begins with brief discussions of residential
segregation and the persistent job crisis facing African Americans. It then presents
evidence that suggests why improving educational attainment and access to
suburban labor markets are not likely to be enough to raise employment rates
among African Americans. This discussion is followed by a proposal for reducing the
high rate of joblessness in and rejuvenating African American communities.
UQ Joblessness now
Huge problem of joblessness now. Statistics underestimate the
problem because once people stop looking for a job, they are
no longer counted in the statistics.
Algernon Austin 11, 12-14-2011, "A jobs-centered approach to African American
community development: The crisis of African American unemployment requires
federal intervention," Economic Policy Institute,
http://www.epi.org/publication/bp328-african-american-unemployment/
The problem of joblessness is a deep and persistent one for African Americans .
Since as early as 1960, the black unemployment rate has been twice the white rate
(Fairlie and Sundstrom 1999).4 As wide as this unemployment rate gap is, it
actually underestimates the magnitude of the problem , because, faced with
persistent challenges finding employment, many would-be job seekers give up hope
of finding a job and drop out of the labor force. Once they do so, they are no
longer counted as unemployed, even though they are jobless. For this
reason, only employment-rate gaps reveal the full magnitude of the problem of
joblessness for African Americans. In 2010, for example, had blacks had the same
unemployment rate as whites, an additional 1.3 million blacks would have been
working. Had blacks had the same employment rate as whites, however, an
additional 2.0 million blacks would have been working.5 The unemployment rate
gap is large, but the employment rate gap is even larger.
USFG Key
Federal government intervention is key.
Algernon Austin 11, 12-14-2011, "A jobs-centered approach to African American
community development: The crisis of African American unemployment requires
federal intervention," Economic Policy Institute,
http://www.epi.org/publication/bp328-african-american-unemployment/
The depth and the persistence of the African American jobs crisis can probably be
solved only with intervention by the federal government . In the past 50
years, the normal working of the U.S. economy and the modest amelioration efforts
that have been tried have failed to provide sufficient jobs for African Americans .
Increases in educational achievement and suburbanization by blacks have also
failed to spur change. If a bold new approach to the problem is not taken, it is likely
that blacks will be condemned to unemployment rates that are twice those of
whites into the foreseeable future.
Human right
A living wage is a basic human right upholds the guarantee of
a dignified existence
(Lipp 02, MaryBeth, Lipp, 75 S. Cal. L. Rev. 475 2001-2002, Legislators'
Obligation to Support a Living Wage: A Comparative Constitutional Vision of Justice,
Acc. Sun Jul 26 19:30:08 2015)
Black, Edelman, and Michelman provide the foundation upon which to build a
substantive vision of justice. Though relying on different sources, each requires a
minimum amount of money or fulfillment to ensure a dignified existence. Black's
constitutional justice of livelihood mandates a decent material basis for life, one
that considers all human needs-both physical and spiritual.3 6 Edelman argues for
a subsistence income, providing all of the conditions necessary for human selfrealization and assuring more liberal provisions than eking out a miserable, meager
existence. 30 7 Rather than suggesting a certain amount of income, Michelman
makes a case for minimum protection of each individual against economic hazard,
which requires satisfaction of just wants or basic needs. He contends that this
protection requires an income that will absolutely meet these needs
without additional prerequisites. 308
Thus, these theorists help to uncover the first necessary component of a
substantive vision of justice. All human beings possess entitlement to enough
income to meet their physical and spiritual needs-at a minimum. These provisions
must assure a self-respecting lifestyle-a guarantee of more than abject poverty. This
subsistence income must secure a lifestyle that facilitates human self-realization-conditions fostering intellectual and cultural development, building community,
living with pride. Finally, this income must provide enough to make certain that the
basic needs of life- one's just wants-will be satisfied without additional requirements
and without state intervention or support. The income that a substantive vision of
justice requires ought to secure self-sufficiency.
Morality
The living wage is more than just a wage increase signifies a
moral standpoint that workers should be able to live a life of
dignity
(Lipp 02, MaryBeth, Lipp, 75 S. Cal. L. Rev. 475 2001-2002, Legislators'
Obligation to Support a Living Wage: A Comparative Constitutional Vision of Justice,
Acc. Sun Jul 26 19:30:08 2015)
The living wage stems from the basic premise that anyone who works for a living
should earn enough money to raise a family outside of poverty.57 Such legislation
symbolizes that the working poor should be paid wages high enough to lift their
families above official poverty levels,58 that limited public funds should never
subsidize poverty wages,59 and that wage labor entitles workers to earnings that
facilitate a life of dignity.60 The movement surrounding the living wage takes
force from two sources: morality and economic fairness.61 The moral argument
seems intuitive: citizen tax dollars should never facilitate the creation or
continuance of poverty.62 Beyond principles ofjustice, however, the living wage
demand has pragmatic force as well. Mainly, when businesses pay workers
substandard wages, taxpayers encounter a forced subsidy to cover the needs that
businesses fail to provide through wages, including healthcare, food stamps, tax
credits, housing assistance, and other social costs of the wage gap and
inequality.63 The living wage movement has strategically identified local
governments as the best soil to sow the seeds of economic justice, or at least the
most appropriate place to lay the roots for future change. 64 Recent attempts to
raise the federal minimum wage by one dollar from $5.15 an hour to $6.15 an hour
have failed.65 Thus, anticipating any raise in the minimum wage at the national
level-let alone an increase to bring minimum wageworkers to the poverty levelremains unrealistic at this time, so long as federal legislators' obligation to do so is
ignored.66
Moral/societal obligation
Justice includes a societal obligation to assure a living wage
you have a moral obligation to vote negative
(Lipp 02, MaryBeth, Lipp, 75 S. Cal. L. Rev. 475 2001-2002, Legislators'
Obligation to Support a Living Wage: A Comparative Constitutional Vision of Justice,
Acc. Sun Jul 26 19:30:08 2015)
Thus, for Edelman, justice in a contemporary society includes "a societal obligation
to assure survival ... at a more generous level than a bed in a homeless shelter and
meals at a soup kitchen." 5 ' In short, his substantive vision of justice requires
subsistence. Finally, Michelman advocates a constitutionally required "minimum
protection against economic hazard" for those who suffer deprivation of "basic
wants." 15 2 Using the Equal Protection Clause, he shifts his focus from equality to
minimum welfare or deprivation in an "individualistic, competitive, and marketoriented" society. 153 Michelman's vision of social justice relies upon a theory of
"just wants."'15 4 More specifically, minimum protection "would mean that persons
are entitled to have certain wants satisfied-certain existing needs filled ... While
Michelman promotes "a right to have a specific, existing want provided for" rather
than increased income, his ideas inform a more expansive view of justice. He posits
that "justice requires more than a fair opportunity to realize an income which can
cover [just wants] or insure against them- requires ... absolute assurance that they
will be met.., free of any remote contingencies pertaining to effort, thrift or
foresight."' 5 6 Together, Black, Edelman, and Michelman contend that justice in a
contemporary constitutional democracy requires income sufficient to
provide the common physical needs of humanity, subsistence, or the
provision of just wants.15 7 Each of these theorists presents a strong case to
argue against poverty in general, supporting a comprehensive vision of economic
justice. Each of their assertions has even more force, however, when applied to the
working poor specifically. Opponents to the above arguments might allege that the
government owes no affirmative duty to provide positive rights and challenge that
doing so will undermine individual responsibility and incentives to work. These
objections lose force, however, in the debate surrounding substandard wages that
create conditions of persistent poverty for the working poor. Guaranteeing a
subsistence income for the working poor or actualizing a just wants theory would
neither amount to government handouts, nor create work disincentives. Instead,
such arguments buttress living wage activists' claims that work should never
advance destitution in a just society.
Intl. Spillover
Movements work internationally constitutions abroad help
build public support for a living wage
(Lipp 02, MaryBeth, Lipp, 75 S. Cal. L. Rev. 475 2001-2002, Legislators'
Obligation to Support a Living Wage: A Comparative Constitutional Vision of Justice,
Acc. Sun Jul 26 19:30:08 2015)
Looking internationally has pragmatic force as well. First, the living wage movement
will continue to take on an international force as the Internet and "exploitable" labor
eliminate economic isolationism, expand our market economy into an integrated
network, and dictate a worldwide dignified wage. Thus, an internationally informed
vision of justice makes sense because legislation emanating from it will have an
impact beyond domestic wageworkers. Second, a successful grassroots effort to
create widespread public acceptance of the living wage will require education and a
strong appeal to passionately held values, such as human dignity and individual self
worth. While one recent survey indicated that forty-two percent of American adults
cite "lack of living-wage jobs" as the "most serious problem facing communities
today,"'1 6 4 the general political consensus seems to belie such widespread
concern. Activists might find helpful language, theory, and doctrinal support in the
constitutional language and judicial reasoning of India and South Africa to build a
public consensus in support of a living wage . Third, a comparative approach might
garner empirical data to help create workable legislation that can negotiate
efficiency, economic, and other practical objections.
Justice
Justice requires this economic reform 7 key components
(Lipp 02, MaryBeth, Lipp, 75 S. Cal. L. Rev. 475 2001-2002, Legislators'
Obligation to Support a Living Wage: A Comparative Constitutional Vision of Justice,
Acc. Sun Jul 26 19:30:08 2015)
In sum, then, a substantive vision of justice comprises seven components. First, this
vision requires wages or income high enough to sustain a dignified lifestyle. Second,
it necessitates an innovative approach to the structuring of wage scales and an
open view of economic efficiency and market functioning. Third, justice requires a
conceptualization of involuntary servitude as including situations where abject
poverty compels workers to engage in labor at subhuman wages. Fourth, a
substantive vision of justice does not view protecting the politically powerless as a
waste of legislative resources or an inappropriate use of government assets.
Instead, it views empowering the vulnerable as a reaffirmation of our commitment
to the Constitution and integral to the security of all human rights. Fifth, justice
includes ambitious and currently unreachable goals, instilling in us an assiduous
effort to provide for the needs of all Americans. Sixth, a substantive vision of justice
inevitably entails trying choices between vulnerable groups or basic human needs.
This conundrum forces a vision that promotes a utilitarian ideal: fulfilling the basic
needs of the greatest number of Americans. Finally, this substantive vision of
justice contains two integral components: a faithfulness to principles of dignity and
fairness coupled with a pragmatic flexibility to confront the economic and social
injustices of the day.
Living wages enable the pursuit of happiness selfdevelopment, cultural enrichment, hopes and dreams
(Lipp 02, MaryBeth, Lipp, 75 S. Cal. L. Rev. 475 2001-2002, Legislators'
Obligation to Support a Living Wage: A Comparative Constitutional Vision of Justice,
Acc. Sun Jul 26 19:30:08 2015)
Finally, living wages facilitate the pursuit of happiness for the working poor. As Black
argues, 3 3 9 poverty may be the foremost obstruction to the pursuit of happiness
for the working poor. For how can the working poor pursue their dreams, their selfdevelopment, cultural enrichment, rest, or leisure if poverty forces them to work
two or three jobs or if the worry of providing for their families destroys any chance
of real relaxation? Poverty wages often prevent the working poor from supplying
nutritious food for their families without the help of food stamps. And how can those
who work full time for a living pursue true happiness if their insufficient wages leave
them either dependent on government assistance or foregoing basic needs?
Disturbing as it may be, poverty wages devastate altogether the hopes, the
dreams, the pursuit of happiness for the working poor. Living wages would
provide enough basic comfort and security to ease the stress of daily
provisions and to free some time and space for one's wants rather than
solely one's needs. Living wages would give the working poor a chance at
the pursuit of happiness.
General welfare
Living wage legislation promotes general welfare huge
exterior benefits
(Lipp 02, MaryBeth, Lipp, 75 S. Cal. L. Rev. 475 2001-2002, Legislators'
Obligation to Support a Living Wage: A Comparative Constitutional Vision of Justice,
Acc. Sun Jul 26 19:30:08 2015)
Second, living wage legislation promotes the general welfare. In addition to justiceoriented arguments in support of the living wage, a "rising tides lifts all boats"
analogy also applies. First, workers earning a living wage experienced great
psychological gains, including improved self-confidence, self-esteem, and pride.331
In addition to these gains, governments with living wage experience tout the
economic incentives of adopting such legislation. 332 Living wages have helped to
narrow disproportionately wide wealth gaps in many communities, lowered tax
monies used for public welfare, allocated more disposable income that wageworkers
can use to oil the economy, and increased tax revenues. 333 The ability to
purchase health insurance and take advantage of preventative healthcare also
decreased unnecessary hospital care of the working poor on the government
dole.334 Employers also applauded the lower turnover and higher quality work
among their employees once they earned a living wage.335 Business owners also
suggest that broad-based living wages promote a healthier business climate, basing
competition on the quality of service or product rather than deplorable wages
Constitutional obligation?
Legislators must uphold the constitution and thus set up living
wage protecting justice, welfare, and the pursuit of
happiness
(Lipp 02, MaryBeth, Lipp, 75 S. Cal. L. Rev. 475 2001-2002, Legislators'
Obligation to Support a Living Wage: A Comparative Constitutional Vision of Justice,
Acc. Sun Jul 26 19:30:08 2015)
Together, Brest and Tushnet illustrate that legislators have a clear duty to consider
the Constitution in creating legislation. Brest encourages legislators to consider
whether proposed legislation will infringe constitutional guarantees or fundamental
rights. Tushnet promotes legislative involvement in populist constitutional law or a
principled political debate that takes the principles of the Declaration of
Independence seriously. These points help to uncover the project of this Note. Once
we understand the legislative responsibility to consider the Constitution in
lawmaking, Tushnet allows us to set living wage legislation in a political debate
framed by the principles of the Declaration of Independence. Taking this argument
structure seriously, this Note uses constitutional and comparative arguments to
develop a substantive vision of justice to argue that living wage legislation is
constitutional in the Tushnet sense. In other words, such laws establish justice,
promote the general welfare, and facilitate the pursuit of happiness for
the working poor. They reflect a commitment to the inalienable rights of
humankind justifiable by reason-a substantive vision of justice-in the
service of self-government.
war." "A nuclear war using only a fraction of existing arsenals would produce
massive casualties on a global scalefar more than we had previously believed ,"
Dr. Ira Helfand, the reports author and IPPNW co-president, said in a statement. As
their previous report showed, years after even a limited nuclear war, production of
corn in the U.S. and China's middle season rice production would severely decline,
and fears over dwindling food supplies would lead to hoarding and increases in food
prices, creating further food insecurity for those already reliant on food imports. The
updated report adds that Chinese winter wheat production would plummet if such a
war broke out. Based on information from new studies combining reductions in
wheat, corn and rice, this new edition doubles the number of people they expect to
be threatened by nuclear-war induced famine to over two billion. "The prospect of a
decade of widespread hunger and intense social and economic instability in the
worlds largest country has immense implications for the entire global community,
as does the possibility that the huge declines in Chinese wheat production will be
matched by similar declines in other wheat producing countries," Helfand stated.
The crops would be impacted, the report explains, citing previous studies, because
of the black carbon particles that would be released, causing widespread changes
like cooling temperatures, decreased precipitation and decline in solar radiation. In
this scenario of famine, epidemics of infectious diseases would be likely, the report
states, and could lead to armed conflict. From the report: Within nations where
famine is widespread, there would almost certainly be food riots, and competition
for limited food resources might well exacerbate ethnic and regional animosities.
Among nations, armed conflict would be a very real possibility as states dependent
on imports attempted to maintain access to food supplies. While a limited nuclear
war would bring dire circumstances, the impacts if the world's biggest nuclear arms
holders were involved would be even worse. " With a large war between the
United States and Russia, we are talking about the possible not certain,
but possibleextinction of the human race.
AT: No war
Yes war
1. Dictators. WWII proves that when economic decline
happens then there is an increased chance of
dictatorships which increase a countries nationalism and
propensity for war
2. Ethnic conflict. Economic decline makes life more hectic
and increases the chances that one group of people will
be scapegoated as an explanation. This increases ethnic
conflict and gives another scenario for war
3. Resource wars. Absent the interdependence that occurs
with a healthy economy, countries no longer have
restrictions on fighting over resources. Paves the way for
armed conflict
4. Free-for all for power. When we dont have a clear
economic and military hegemon, war is almost
guaranteed. WW1 and WWII prove and were the most
bloody wars in history.
Case
justice, drawn from the arguments of American legal theorists. This vision borrows
additional ideas from a comparative analysis in Part V. This section examines the
Constitutions and case law of India and South Africa to supplement and advance
this vision of justice. Ultimately, the vision drawn from these sources suggests that
a truly just society-one based on the principles of equality, life, liberty, and the
pursuit of happiness-requires dignified subsistence for all people at the very
minimum. Part VI garners language, aspirational narratives, philosophies, and other
concrete building blocks for assembling this coherent vision of substantive justice
that guarantees human dignity for the working poor. Finally, this Note utilizes this
carefully constructed vision of justice, with the empirical data amassed in Part II, to
put forth one side of a principled, political debate that adheres to our founding
values. This Note ultimately concludes that living wage legislation meets legislators'
obligation to consider the Constitution because it carries out the project of the
Declaration of Independence.
FWK
Mechanism Stuf
2NC Side Bias
Not defending the clear actor and mechanism of the resolution produces a substantive side
bias and produces worse debates
1. Minimize Lit Base Their inter incentivizes picking the smallest lit base possible. Aff
advocacies based on mechanisms from single articles or created phrases produce less
nuanced debates and decrease both the ability and incentive to engage in research. There is
no incentive to produce detailed strategies because academic disagreements in the
literature are minute and easily wished away by the structure of debate like perms or Aff
changes.
2. Link Recontextualiztion and Multiple Normative Claims prevent DAs to focus, links of
omission, or other non-absolutist academic disagreements.
3. Number of non-topical advocacies prevents in depth research and the ability to break a
new affirmative with no connection to the previous mechanism negates incentives to
produce detailed case negs
The first impact to Aff sides bias is absolutism anthro, Baudrillard and other structural
criticisms are the only recourse to ensure links and be able to keep up with Aff volume
especially for small schools. This forces us to the academic margins, makes us less effective
scholars and less literate in current events. Trains us only for leftist infighting, rather than
social change.
Dixon 14 (activist, writer, anarchist and educator who received a PhD from the History of Consciousness program
at the University of California, Santa Cruz. He has been involved in transformative social movements for more than
two decades.)
(Chris, Another Politics Talking across Today's Transformative Movements, pg. 111)
There is a certain prefigurative logic to this tendency-a sense that, if we announce our convictions
loudly enough and do everything in the way that we think is most righteously radical, our
activities will achieve what we want. But this is a prefigurative politics detached from
calculated consequential action. I As Lehman said, "If I can't articulate what that larger whole is
and where that larger whole is going or where it could potentially go, then I'm participating on blind
hope, and I think there are a lot of us doing that. And I don't think you can operate on principles alone.
We have to have a strategy, and it has to be a viable one-not just based on an idea of how it could possibly
work but we don't know how to ge' from here to there."
One result of this fixation on principles over plans is that activists often spend a lot of time and
energy debating whether particular individuals, activities, or organizations are sufficiently
"radical" without asking basic questions about how they seek to move us toward
actually winning. A focus on political ideas and rhetoric, in this way, eclipses strategic
thinking. It also creates a context in which some activists are quick to dismiss any effortoften sloppily using the terms "liberal" and "reformist"-that doesn't lead directly to
the complete destruction of the existing social order. San Francisco direct action organizer
David Salnit didn't mince words about this: "A lot of radicals talk shit about anything short
of smashing the state, but they don't have any idea of how to take necessary steps
in that direction."
2NC Competition
Frame the interp debate through the zero sum nature of debate competition The yes/no
structure of debate radically redefines how educational choices should be made and has to
be the first issue you address when read their cards. This explicitly zero sum environment
short circuits their aspirational educational claims.
requires conscious strategies and a movement culture that supports strategic discussion
and planning.
Many in the anti-authoritarian current yearn for this. As Toronto-based youth organ.izer Pauline Hwang
put it, "To have some level of dialogue at which these questions are being raised-the questions of longterm direc- tion, the questions of how does our work fit into building the society we want to have after the
so-called revolution-having that kind of dialogue is important to rne." This yearning is something I've
encountered again and again in conversations and workshops with activists across the continent. So why
do we have such tremendous difficulty sustaining this kind of dialogue and developing
strategy? In my view, there are three major obstacles that trip us up again and again.
The first of these obstacles is a tendency to focus on principles over plans. This focus, which comes
out of some sectors of North American anarchism in particular, is based on a legitimate concern that
radicals may sacrifice our core values and beliefs in order to win.' But focusing exclusively on principles slips into a kind of magical thinking: if we have the right ideas and values, so this goes,
everything else will more or less follow. Brooke Lehman, an experienced activist and educator who
was involved with Occupy Wall Street, characterized this tendency as "Well, I'm gonna do what I believe
in and what feels right to me and just be a piece of this larger whole."
b. Poor Engagement their interp makes link comparisons vacuous and means that
detailed PICs about substance are all but impossible. Theres literature on the judge
voting yes or no, they prevent questions of materiality and scale which turns the Aff.
Our 1NC Capulong ev say that only constant organizational and political
calibration can produce mass movements. It is not our analytic weaknesses, but the
opportunistic, strategic, and political definiteness in our political debate that
prevent success now.
analysis for the production of appropriate strategies can only be accomplished through a
multiplicity of collective reflections, debates and decision making in public spaces for
public action(s). The protests that have spread since the food riots in Algeria on the 6th January, the
revolution in Tunisia and then the revolution in Egypt and then riots spreading to Bahrain, Yemen, Libya,
Jordan and others have drawn lessons from each other providing experience for the development of local
strategies. Any protest will give insights into the conditions underlying the protests and the community
and state structures, discourses, practices, and processes that tacitly if not explicitly underlie the social,
political and economic order at local, national, transnational and global levels. This is why, it seems to
me, that critically exploring from an educational and research perspective what has happened in response
to Wikileaks and has been happening in the Middle East is so important today.
The focus on action in a separate sphere broadly defined as civil society can be self-defeating
precisely because it conceals the many ways in which law continues to play a crucial
role in all spheres of life. Today, the lines between private and public functions are increasingly
blurred, forming what Professor Gunther Teubner terms "polycorporatist regimes," a symbiosis between
private and public sectors. n187 Similarly, new economic partnerships and structures blur the lines
between for-profit and nonprofit entities. n188 Yet much of the current literature on the limits of legal
reform and the crisis of government action is built upon a privatization/regulation binary, particularly
with regard [*979] to social commitments, paying little attention to how the background conditions of a
privatized market can sustain or curtail new conceptions of the public good. n189 In the same way, legal
scholars often emphasize sharp shifts between regulation and deregulation, overlooking the continuing
presence of legal norms that shape and inform these shifts. n190 These false dichotomies should resonate
well with classic cooptation analysis, which shows how social reformers overestimate the possibilities of
one channel for reform while crowding out other paths and more complex alternatives.
Indeed, in the contemporary extralegal climate, and contrary to the conservative portrayal of federal
social policies as harmful to the nonprofit sector, voluntary associations have flourished in mutually
beneficial relationships with federal regulations. n191 A dichotomized notion of a shift between
spheres - between law and informalization, and between regulatory and nonregulatory schemes -
therefore neglects the ongoing possibilities within the legal system to develop and
sustain desired outcomes and to eliminate others. The challenge for social reform
groups and for policymakers today is to identify the diverse ways in which some legal
regulations and formal structures contribute to socially responsible practices while
others produce new forms of exclusion and inequality. Community empowerment requires
ongoing government commitment. n192 In fact, the most successful community-based projects have been
those which were not only supported by public funds, but in which public administration also continued
to play some coordination role. n193
Agent Key
Failure to identify an agent for change dooms their politics
Capulong 9 (Assistant Professor of Law, University of Montana)
(Eduardo R.C., CLIENT ACTIVISM IN PROGRESSIVE LAWYERING THEORY, CLINICAL LAW REVIEW, 16
Clinical L. Rev. 109, Fall, 2009)
Japanese, Korean, Vietnamese, Thai, Cambodian, Lao, Lao-Mien, [*191] Hmong, Indian, Indonesian,
Malaysian, Samoan, Tongan, Guamanian, Native Hawaiian, and more. The legal problems facing
individuals from different communities defy simple categorization. The problems of a fourth-generation
Japanese American victim of job discrimination, a monolingual refugee from Laos seeking shelter from
domestic violence, an elderly immigrant from the Philippines trying to keep a job, and a newcomer from
Western Samoa trying to reunite with relatives living abroad all present unique challenges. Add in factors
such as gender, sexual orientation, age, and disability, and the problems become even more complex.
n459
Angela Harris echoes this observation by pointing out how some feminist legal theory assumes "a unitary,
'essential' women's experience [that] can be isolated and described independently of race, class, sexual
orientation, and other realities of experience." n460 The same might be said of the "people," which, like
the "working class," may be too broad. Other categorizations--such as "low-income workers,"
"immigrants", and the "poor", for example--may be too narrow to have the social weight to fundamentally
transform society.
the question of how the group can challenge the existing balance of power, it is unlikely
to result in structural change, because structural change requires engagement with structural power."
n180 However, the language that she uses to describe the results of the Workplace Project's experiment in
mobilizing internal power to produce structural reform is often couched in possibility and potential rather
than in concrete examples and evidence. She notes that participation has "the potential to have far more of
a collective impact that we can measure by looking at one slice of time" and suggests that "in the long
term" there is the possibility of building participation into a larger social movement. n181 In the
meantime, the structural impact of [*1281] empowerment may be visible in terms of the way immigrant
workers relate to community institutions - becoming more active in their children's schools, remaining
involved in home country politics, and starting up mutual help community organizations. n182
There is nothing wrong with planting the seeds of reform and placing one's hope for change in the
harvest to come. And, certainly, there are important reasons to want to promote legal consciousness
among the poor. But there are risks in this strategy, not the least of which is exaggerating the autonomy of
the poor in a way that obscures the structural nature of their condition and the need for some sort of
society-wide response. n183 The question is: How does changed consciousness become
imprinted on the world outside in the form of different laws, restructured economic
relationships, or concrete political power? The book does provide one powerful example of the
move to political participation in the example of member leadership in the passage of the UWPA. Others
stories like this would be useful.
Once again, this conclusion reveals flaws parallel to the original disenchantment with legal reform.
Although the new extralegal frames present themselves as apt alternatives to legal reform
models and as capable of producing significant changes to the social map, in practice they generate
very limited improvement in existing social arrangements. Most strikingly, the cooptation
effect here can be explained in terms of the most profound risk of the typology - that of legitimation. The
common pattern of extralegal scholarship is to describe an inherent instability in dominant structures by
pointing, for example, to grassroots strategies, n223 and then to assume that specific instances of
counterhegemonic activities translate into a more complete transformation. This celebration of
multiple micro-resistances seems to rely on an aggregate approach - an idea that the
multiplication of practices will evolve into something substantial. In fact, the myth of engagement
obscures the actual lack of change being produced, while the broader pattern of equating
extralegal activism with social reform produces a false belief in the potential of change.
There are few instances of meaningful reordering of social and economic arrangements and macroredistribution. Scholars write about decoding what is really happening, as though the scholarly narrative has the power to unpack more than the actual conventional
experience will admit. n224 Unrelated efforts become related and part of a whole through mere reframing. At the same time, the elephant in the room - the rising level of
economic inequality - is left unaddressed and comes to be understood as natural and inevitable. n225 This is precisely the problematic process that critical theorists decry as
losers' self-mystification, through which marginalized groups come to see systemic losses as the [*986] product of their own actions and thereby begin to focus on minor
achievements as representing the boundaries of their willed reality.
The explorations of micro-instances of activism are often fundamentally performative, obscuring the distance between the descriptive and the prescriptive. The manifestations
of extralegal activism - the law and organizing model; the proliferation of informal, soft norms and norm-generating actors; and the celebrated, separate nongovernmental
sphere of action - all produce a fantasy that change can be brought about through small-scale, decentralized transformation. The emphasis is local, but the locality is described
as a microcosm of the whole and the audience is national and global. In the context of the humanities, Professor Carol Greenhouse poses a comparable challenge to
ethnographic studies from the 1990s, which utilized the genres of narrative and community studies, the latter including works on American cities and neighborhoods in trouble.
n226 The aspiration of these genres was that each individual story could translate into a "time of the nation" body of knowledge and motivation. n227 In contemporary legal
thought, a corresponding gap opens between the local scale and the larger, translocal one. In reality, although there has been a recent proliferation of associations and grassroots
groups, few new local-state-national federations have emerged in the United States since the 1960s and 1970s, and many of the existing voluntary federations that flourished in
the mid-twentieth century are in decline. n228 There is, therefore, an absence of links between the local and the national, an absent intermediate public sphere, which has been
termed "the missing middle" by Professor Theda Skocpol. n229 New social movements have for the most part failed in sustaining coalitions or producing significant
institutional change through grassroots activism. Professor Handler concludes that this failure is due in part to the ideas of contingency, pluralism, and localism that are so
embedded in current activism. n230 Is the focus on small-scale dynamics simply an evasion of the need to engage in broader substantive debate?
that participate in political activities, engage the public debate, and aim to
challenge and reform existing realities. n231 We must differentiate between
professional associations and more inclusive forms of institutions that act as
trustees for larger segments of the community. n232 As described above, extralegal
activism tends to operate on a more divided and hence a smaller scale than earlier
social movements, which had national reform agendas. Consequently, within critical
discourse there is a need to recognize the limited capacity of small-scale action. We
Cummings and Eagly 2k1 (Staff Attorney, Community Development Project, Public Counsel Law Center,
Los Angeles, California. J.D., Harvard Law School; Coordinating Attorney, Immigrant Domestic Violence Project,
Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles (CHIRLA), Los Angeles, California. J.D., Harvard Law
School)
(Scott L. and Ingrid V., A Critical Reflection on Law and Organizing, 48 UCLA L. Rev. 443, LN)
Gordon has offered a particularly comprehensive vision of law and organizing practice. She argues that
there are "three interesting and under-explored possibilities for how to use law" in grassroots organizing
work. n105 First, law can be used "as a draw" to bring new members into an organization that
has larger organizing and reformist goals. n106 The promise of legal assistance on a discrete case can
motivate a worker to come to a workers' meeting at which she will be exposed to the broader educational
and organizing activities of the group. Second, the law can be used as a "measure of injustice." n107 For
instance, as part of educational efforts, workers can be asked to analyze how their own experiences may
diverge from what the law defines as basic legal protections. In this way, a discussion of legal issues
can highlight discrepancies between the law as written and the law as lived by
marginalized workers. n108 The gap between the legal ideal and practical reality can
then be used to chart a course for political action and community mobilization. Finally,
the law can be used as "part of a larger organizing campaign" n109 in which the ultimate
goal is not to win a particular lawsuit, but rather to achieve specific organizing objectives and build
power among unrepresented groups. According to this conception, the law serves as a
strategic mechanism to support or advance organizing campaigns in practical ways - for example, by
filing a lawsuit to call attention to a broader structural issue or to put pressure on an employer or industry
to undertake systemic reforms. n110
[this is the one to skip if youre short on time]
c. Short term survival Rejecting engagement with the law directly trades off with
mechanisms that help ensure the daily survival of underserved populations [poor people
flood legal services offices seeking assistance in accessing welfare benefits, contesting
discriminatory employment terminations, petitioning for political asylum, resisting
unlawful evictions, obtaining restraining orders from abusive spouses, and recovering
illegally withheld wages]
Cummings and Eagly 2k1 (Staff Attorney, Community Development Project, Public Counsel Law Center,
Los Angeles, California. J.D., Harvard Law School; Coordinating Attorney, Immigrant Domestic Violence Project,
Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles (CHIRLA), Los Angeles, California. J.D., Harvard Law
School)
(Scott L. and Ingrid V., A Critical Reflection on Law and Organizing, 48 UCLA L. Rev. 443, LN)
First, exaggerating
readily to the advantage of cynics on the right who work to promote it. They want to promote cynicism
with respect to the state and innocence with respect to the market. Pure critique, as already suggested,
does not suffice either. Pure critique too readily carries critics and their followers to the edge of cynicism.
It is also true that the above critique concentrates on neoliberal capital- ism, not capitalism writ large.
That is because it seems to me that we need to specify the terms of critique as closely as possible and
think first of all about interim responses. If we lived under, say, Keynesian capitalism, a somewhat
different set of issues would be defined and other strategies identified. Capitalism writ largewhile it
sets a general context that neoliberalism inflects in specific wayssets too large and generic a target. It
can assume multiple forms, as the differences between Swedish and American capitalism suggest; the
times demand a set of interim agendas targeting the hegemonic form of today, pursued with heightened
militancy at sev- eral sites. The point today is not to wait for a revolution that overthrows the whole
system. The "system," as we shall see further, is replete with too many loose ends, uneven edges, dicey
intersections with nonhuman forces, and uncertain trajectories to make such a wholesale project plausible.
Be- sides, things are too urgent and too many people on the ground are suffer- ing too much now.
The need now is to activate the most promising political strategies to the contemporary condition out of a
bad set. On top of assessing probabilities and predicting them with secret relish or despairactivities I
myself pur- sue during the election seasonwe must define the urgent needs of the day in
relation to a set of interim possibilities worthy of pursuit on several fronts, even if the
apparent political odds are stacked against them. We then test ourselves and those possibilities
by trying to enact this or that aspect of them at diverse sites, turning back to reconsider their efficacy and
side effects as circumstances shift and results accrue. In so doing we may ex- perience more vibrantly
how apparently closed and ossified structures are typically punctuated by jagged edges, seams, and
fractures best pried open with a mix of public contestation of established interpretations, experimen- tal
shifts in multiple role performances, micropolitics in churches, univer- sities, unions, the media, and
corporations, state actions, and large-scale, cross-state citizen actions.
Pragmatic use of the law can be successful at fighting back against neoliberalism
Ashar 8 (Associate Professor of Law and Director of the Immigrant and Refugee Rights Clinic, City University of
New York (CUNY) School of Law)
(Sameer M., LAW CLINICS AND COLLECTIVE MOBILIZATION, 14 Clinical L. Rev. 355, LN)
Public interest lawyers today represent clients in a period of rapid political and economic change. Poor
people are besieged by unprecedented market forces with less protection by the state than at
any other time in our recent history. Multinational corporate actors and their collaborators in
government have advanced an agenda in both developed and developing nations - described by some
as "neoliberal globalization"-with three major tenets: (1) weakening and impoverishment of the state
so that it is unable to provide basic social protections; (2) privatization of formerly public
functions; and (3) free and rapid movement of capital that facilitates lowered labor and
environmental standards. n9 In the United States, the advocates of neoliberalism successfully fought
to remove the federal social welfare entitlement in 1996 and to condition access to subsistence relief on
participation in enforced labor programs, thus expanding the class of [*361] low-wage workers in the
economy. n10 The reserve wage has fallen as our clients have become more vulnerable to their employers
and other market actors, including banks and landlords. Previously robust civil society organizations,
such as unions and identity-based associations, have weakened n13 and increasingly depend
upon corporate and governmental patrons.
In response to this environment, a growing number of small groups of poor and working-class people
have risen to challenge the reordering of our economy and politics. These resistance movements selfconsciously act locally and think globally, allying themselves (actually or symbolically) with grassroots
movements outside the United States. n14 This resistance simultaneously opposes neoliberalism and
constructs a decentralized "radical democratic" program. n15 In the area in which I work, immigrant
workers and organizers have banded together along ethnic, geographic, and
occupational lines in "worker centers" to improve their conditions of employment
through direct action, litigation, and legislation. n16 These worker centers have drawn [*362]
extensively in the course of their campaigns on legal resources provided by a small number of law school
clinics. n17 Similarly informed and designed law school clinics have also had highly productive
collaborations with environmental justice, n18 welfare rights, n19 and community
development organizations n20 that are either directly or indirectly related to global social
movements.
Well provide a bunch of examples that the law can be used successfully for Black and
other oppressed populations:
First, community labor groups and the movement for undocumented immigrants
Cummings 7 (Acting Professor of Law, UCLA School of Law)
(Scott L., CRITICAL LEGAL CONSCIOUSNESS IN ACTION, 120 Harv. L. Rev. F. 62, Harvard Law Review
Forum, LN)
B. Revisiting the Role of Law Within the Paradigmatic Social Movements
check neutrality, living wage laws, the imposition of community benefits requirements
on publicly subsidized private developers, and limits on the negative economic impact
of big-box retail stores like Wal-Mart. n39 These efforts have enlisted lawyers to conduct research
on living wage impacts, draft legislation, negotiate community benefits agreements with developers, and
resist big-box developments through land use and environmental challenges.
Classical civil rights activism has been channeled into a diverse range of new movements, including
prominent efforts to promote the rights of immigrants and other noncitizens. The movement for
undocumented immigrant rights has deployed a traditional social movement strategy,
with the 2006 "Spring Marches" demonstrating power in numbers in order to influence the content of a
proposed guest worker statute. The movement has also relied on strategic litigation, as mentioned above
in the context of restaurant and garment advocacy, as well as organizing-based labor enforcement efforts
in the low-wage immigrant work sector, as the example of the Workplace Project illustrates. [*71] In the
wake of the Bush administration's counterterrorism policies after 9/11, we have also been reminded of the
continued importance of public interest law in protecting the rights of noncitizens against executive
power, with the Center for Constitutional Rights bringing two successful lawsuits that resulted in courts
upholding the right of detainees to challenge their detention through habeas corpus in Rasul v. Bush n40
and invalidating military commissions in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld. n41 Though these cases have by no
means ended the battle over detainee rights, they have succeeded in mobilizing intense political pressure
on administration officials to change their practices. It is the self-conscious effort to combine the
legal and political -- to deploy them in mutually reinforcing ways that recognize the power and limits
of both -- that points beyond the boundaries of extralegalism.
Another practice frequently associated with community organizing is legislative advocacy. Although
many efforts to influence legislation have an organizing component, it is important to disaggregate the
concepts in order to better understand the different levers for applying political pressure. An example
of effective legislative advocacy by the Workplace Project highlights this point. By
organizing aggrieved Latino workers and building political coalitions with sympathetic
constituencies, Workplace Project organizers were able to help win the passage of
stringent employer penalties for nonpayment of wages. n169 In this effort, the Workplace
Project relied on a variety of community-based techniques, including education, n170 media pressure,
n171 and signature gathering. n172 In addition, organizers and community members worked together to
draft legislation and conduct lobbying [*483] visits with key legislators. These varied practices suggest
different roles for lawyers engaged in legislative work. In particular, practitioners supporting the efforts
of a community-based organization to change the law might explain the technical aspects of the
existing legal regime, research how other jurisdictions have dealt with similar issues, assist in
drafting legislation, and help the organization understand and negotiate the legislative
process.
Not only does organizing practice comprise a range of different techniques, it also takes place within
disparate institutional contexts. In his recent work on organizing, Gary Delgado, one of the founders of
ACORN, highlights three principal community organizing structures: (1) the direct membership model,
(2) the coalition model, and (3) the institutionally based model. n173 These structures vary in terms of
their constituencies and methods, and often organizers working within these structures employ a
combination of tactical strategies. Groups using the direct membership model are generally small,
geographically based organizations of low-and moderate-income members that aim to increase their
political power through direct action, including organized protests, strategic pressure, and media
campaigns. n174 Coalitions, in contrast, are issue-based groupings of existing organizations that seek to
mobilize their members to change public policy through lobbying, public hearings, and electoral work.
n175 Institutionally based organizations, which tend to be affiliated with religious institutions, focus on
developing strong indigenous leaders who use public pressure and negotiation strategies to influence local
politics. n176
Law and organizing practice can vary depending on the type of institutional arrangements chosen by
community groups. In a direct membership organization the lawyer might be asked to provide limited
legal assistance to members. Frequently such services are promoted as a benefit of membership and used
as a method to draw new members. For instance, a group focused on welfare reform might offer a free
consultation with a lawyer on benefits issues in order to attract welfare recipients as members. Coalition
[*484] organizations, in contrast, might find it useful for lawyers to share their knowledge of a particular
specialized issue. For example, a coalition focused on immigrant rights would need a lawyer to explain
existing immigration laws and interpret new legislative proposals. Finally, lawyers working with an
institutionally based organization might be asked to analyze local redevelopment laws or the rules
governing municipal decision making in order to strengthen the organization's ability to influence
political decisions affecting the allocation of local resources.
job training programs in low-income communities. Yet, despite these examples of model practices, many
community activists continue to adopt the rhetoric of organizing without having developed an
understanding of the complexity of community-based practices. In order for lawyers to target their legal
resources in a way that advances community projects, a more intricate typology of organizing methods is
needed. At the moment, the picture of what organizing is - as well as what it is not - is still incomplete.
Empowerment of the poor will not come from a withdrawal of legal services. If we, as
advocates of the poor, simultaneously withdrew the provision of our services, the current system
would not bow down in penitent acquiescence under the weight of our moral
uprightness, but rather, the system would greedily digest its unprotected prey and the fit
that continued to survive would simply become relatively more fit. In the meantime, we need to work in
collaboration with not for the poor. Poverty will only be eradicated through the coordinated efforts and
actions of various different sectors of society committed to ending the oppression of the poor. We must
work to create alliances aimed at taking the poor out of isolation. As L6pez writes:
Lawyers must know how to work with (not just on behalf of) women, low-income people,
people of color, gays and lesbians, the disabled, and the elderly. They must know how to
collaborate with other professional and lay allies rather than ignoring the help that these other problemsolvers may provide in a given situation. They must understand how to educate those with
whom they work, particularly about law and professional lawyering, and, at the same time, they
must open themselves up to being educated by all those with whom they come in contact, particularly
about the traditions and experiences of life on the bottom and at the margins.
disenchantment with the legal system, we can learn from both the successes and failures
of past models, with the aim of constantly redefining the boundaries of legal reform and making
visible law's broad reach.
Anti-capitalism is too often little more than a sentiment, easily captured as a slogan on a wall
or banner. Much of the discussion stays close to the surface. Its as if we, as anarchists,
dont feel a responsibility to intellectually challenge capitalist dogma on its own terms
(because we cant? because it requires an incredible amount of work?). We rail against capitalist
institutions and forms but spend too little time working to understand them and to
effectively translate that understanding to others. So its with pleasure that we welcome works
likeAccumulation, David Graebers Debt, and forthcoming titles like Wayne Prices revamped book on
Marxs economics for anarchists (2012), and Geoff Manns Dissassembly Required: A Field Guide to
Actually Existing Capitalism (2013). Those smug anarchists quick to dismiss the study of economic
offs of legal action and non-legal alternatives and a strategic plan of action that
combines the best of both.
We have found lobbying to be a good strategy for promoting empowerment among our
clients. In the court, we, the lawyers, are in control of the process. Lobbying makes it easier for us to
More evidence
Guinier and Torres 14 (Prof of Law @ Harvard; Professor of Law @ Cornell)
(Lani and Gerald, THE MEANING OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS REVOLUTION: Changing the Wind: Notes Toward a
Demosprudence of Law and Social Movements, June, 2014, Yale Law Journal, 123 Yale L.J. 2740, LN)
In many ways, our project is not new. Like Professor Ackerman, we are challenging the privileging of formal sources of authority
that discount or minimize the role of social movement activists and other contentious forms of organized power to name their own
reality and give that reality a heart, a soul, and a story. The political transformation of the United States comes not just from what
the Court is doing or what arguments the lawyers for the social movements are making. The movement activists themselves are part
of the law creation process. They make some arguments more resonant and even more plausible. This is what Adam Liptak, in
describing the dueling roles played by iconic Supreme Court cases like Brown v. Board of Education, calls the "music" as opposed
to the "logic" of law. n237 Lawyers are usually understood to control the logic of law through their analysis of precedent and
commitment to principle. Meanwhile, the activists reveal the music of law by combining legal rights talk with home-grown stories
of justice that define normative or narrative frames through which to understand what the courts thought they [*2800] were doing.
in some cases and in other cases to engage, at minimum, in critical reflection. n240 When a "dynamic"
constituency names its own reality by, for example, singing spirituals in the church choir, composing its
own anthems in the call and response of the amen corner, or summoning in plain English, before a
television audience, the brutal hardship of trying to register to vote in Mississippi, movement activists
supply additional sources of authority for the lawyer and a new source of accountability for both the
lawyer and "the law." By expressing what the law means to those subject to it, activists
create new grounds on which to interpret the law and make it harder for elites to say it means something other than what those
on the street thought it should mean if it were talking to their experience. Any substantial disjunction is felt as injustice. It is through this potential feedback effect that those
who sing the music of law can have a role in composing its logic.
By defining winning in its narrowest possible terms, as Joe Rauh did with the MFDP, lawyers may prompt litigants to celebrate important tactical victories. At the same time,
the strategic vision essential to sustainable long-term change can be lost. n241 Nonetheless, whatever their historically contingent [*2801] role, Fred Gray's relationship with
the MIA shows that law and lawyers ultimately do much of the heavy lifting in shaping a social movement's trajectory in fashioning both its short term objectives and long term
consequences. n242 Because lawyers occupy both an elite and expert position and often do not reflect on the impact of their expertise on their imagination, their role in social
movements deserves more attention.
Cause lawyers and legal scholars have begun to take notice of the multiple ways practicing lawyers, organizers, and policy makers can and do represent marginalized
communities to tell different stories and make new law. n243 There is renewed interest in researching the relationship between social movements and lawmaking among legal
scholars and practitioners on the left n244 as well as the right. n245
[*2802] Even so, much of the focus is still on discovering new avenues for elite driven social change. Some cause lawyers search for ways to do "public education" or develop
"communications strategies" to win support for their cases, but they rarely pause to wonder whether the cases they litigate resonate with the lived experience of their clients, not
just their putative supporters and funders. n246 Sociologists, political scientists, and historians have long studied social movements, yet their theories of social change also
separate out the role of law and lawyers, as if lawyers and social movement actors function on parallel but distinctive tracks. Similarly, many lawyers and law professors still
focus on legal cases and judicial opinions without necessarily considering the social, political, and historical forces that influence the development of legal doctrine. Unlike
Professor Ackerman, they concern themselves primarily with formal lawmaking by the judiciary, the legislature, or the executive. Lawyers, in particular, too often assume that
their maximum opportunity to influence the [*2803] law is through formal argument in judicial settings. Their argument, however, is not necessarily situated in a larger story
that has normative force of its own and may be distinguishable from what the courts say is important. Even when moments of popular constitutionalism are considered, the
actions of "the people" count only when they can be canonized through the published opinions of courts or the statutory language of legislators. n247 In either case, it is the
judiciary that serves as law's authoritative editor.
By contrast, we contend that democratic societies are organized to produce a variety of authoritative interpretive communities. n248 The MFDP, Montgomery Bus Boycott, and
UFW stories exemplify the ways a social movement functioning as an authoritative interpretative community can play a critical role in redefining the meaning of accountability,
democratic action, and American democracy.
Hamer and the other MFDP delegates were exemplary "wind changers." Their goal was to widen the scope of meaningful participation in decision-making. They questioned the
limited definition of what is legitimate representation; they redefined meaningful participation; and they insisted on a wider scope for who should be included in decisionmaking. By contrast, the politicians and the national leaders, as members of the state apparatus, stood with their wet fingers in the wind without noticing that the weather was
changing.
The roles played by Fred Gray and other lawyers in the Montgomery Bus Boycott, the story that law ultimately tells, the driving ideal of equality, the assumption about the
source of power to make change, and the definition of success all reflect the distinctive interpretive communities to which the lawyers felt they were accountable. In the case of
[*2804] national citizenship applies to black people in Alabama motivates this community. These people
are inspired to take risks in support of this ideal because of their belief in a just God and the support they
gain from religious cultural rituals, as manifest in the religious tenor, the spirituality, and the singing at
mass meetings. Through their collective struggle and communal resourcefulness they gain a
sense of agency and create a constituency of resistance that builds a new organization and
inspires a series of national movements.
to pursue possible sites of strategic action that might open up room for productive
change. Today it seems important to attend to the relation be- tween the need for
structural change and identification of multiple sites of potential action. You do not know
precisely what you are doing when you participate in such a venture. You combine an experimental
temper with the appreciation that living and acting into the future inevitably contain a shifting quotient of
uncertainty. The following tentative judgments and sites of action may be pertinent.
1) Neither neoliberal theory, nor socialist productivism, nor deep ecology, nor social democracy in its
classic form seems sufficient to the contemporary condition. This is so in part because the powers of
market self- regulation are both real and limited in relation to a larger multitude of heterogeneous force
fields beyond the human estate with differential powers of self-regulation and metamorphosis. A first task
is to challenge neoliberal ideology through critique and by elaborating and publicizing positive
alternatives that acknowledge the disparate relations between mar- ket processes, other cultural systems,
and nonhuman systems. Doing so to render the fragility of things more visible and palpable. Doing so,
too, to set the stage for a series of intercoded shifts in citizen role performances, social movements, and
state action.
2) Those who seek to reshape the ecology of late capitalism might set an interim agenda of radical reform
and then recoil back on the initiatives adopted to see how they work. An interim agenda is the best thing
to focus on because in a world of becoming the more distant future is too cloudy to engage. We must,
for instance, become involved in experimental micro- politics on a variety of fronts, as we
participate in role experimentations, social movements, artistic displays, erotic-political shows,
electoral campaigns, and creative interventions on the new media to help recode the
ethos that now occupies investment practices, consumption desires, family savings, state priorities,
church assemblies, university curricula, and media reporting. It is important to bear in mind how extant
ideologies, estab- lished role performances, social movements, and commitments to state action intersect.
To shift some of our own role performances in the zones of travel, church participation, home energy use,
investment, and consump- tion, for instance, that now implicate us deeply in foreign oil dependence and
the huge military expenditures that secure it, could make a minor dif- ference on its own and also lift
some of the burdens of institutional implica- tion from us to support participation in more adventurous
interpretations, political strategies, demands upon the state, and cross-state citizen actions.
One cannot combat, head on, all sovereignty, sovereignty in general, without
threatening at the same time, beyond the nation-state figure of sovereignty, the classical
principles of freedom and self-determination. Like the classical tradition of law (and the force
that it presupposes), these classical principles remain inseparable from a sovereignty at once indivisible
and yet able to be shared. Nation-state sovereignty can even itself, in certain conditions, become
benefit from more formalized processes where specified procedural rights and
substantive standards can be employed to render accountable dominant interests who
control the bulk of material and organizational resources (Delgado et al., 1985).
lawyers can believe in the inadequacy of the liberal rights framework and the
adversarial system but still make rights claims in court; reject formalism but still engage
in rule-bound lawyering; believe that helping individuals alone will never bring about
social justice, but keep helping individuals; understand the indeterminacy of any road towards
social justice but still meaningfully debate the best goals and methods; and believe that there is
inherent domination whenever lawyers engage with their clients but still offer their professional skills in
the service of others and the movement. Progressive legal advocates--attorneys and academics alike-should value the work of those who have the patience and commitment to offer life-sustaining help day in
and day out.
on the ground to make them feasible. A combination of luck, exhaustion of the most
militant constituencies on each side, cultural shaming, and creative action by nonstate
actors within and across states is also needed to turn the machine in a new direction. The
hawkish minorities on each side must be matched and surpassed by counter-constituencies anchored in
multiple sites.
Here I focus primarily on one dimension of such activity, a "triggering" force that carries Hegel's
expressive dimension of sovereignty into contemporary role definitions. It is misleading to divide the
political world into individuals, constituency organizations, and states. Each individual, for instance, is
ensconced in a variety of roles. And each role both informs the individual and is linked to larger
assemblages. The connections are relatively conscious when consumption patterns of dress, hairstyle,
housing, entertainment, and car choke forge identity niches. Role specific habits of eye contact are less
conscious, as in the street rules of middle class eye contact between the sexes in the United States of the
1950s. Yet those habits helped to constitute a pattern of gender relations that found expression in family
life, education, dating, sports, work life, voting habits, and church practices. A role is neither reducible
entirely to the individuals who inhabit it nor thoroughly assimilable to the larger assemblages that help to
shape and manage it. It is the site of strategic ambiguity, periodically susceptible for that reason to
creative political deployment.
To consider multiple roles in relation to this global resonance machine suggests how
accumulated changes in these practices might make a contribution to turning the
machine in a different direction. Certainly, a large number of preachers, imams, rabbis, writers,
military leaders, talking heads, and unemployed workers introduced changes into role conduct that helped
to organize the current machine. Osama bin Laden's roles as a wealthy man, investor, devotee of Islam,
Saudi, and charismatic leader all underwent change when he founded Al Qaeda.
We are, variously, teachers, blue collar workers, writers, film directors, consumers, investors, faith
devotees, parents, lovers, voters, Internet users, Tv viewers, military veterans, charity donors, members of
an age cohort, contributors to retirement funds, homeowners or renters, neighbors, models, athletes,
students, advertising executives, geologists, oil drifters, and so on, endlessly. The trick today is to
infuse a bit of the warrior ethic into the performance of several of these roles, not in the
spirit of Napoleon, Putin, and Bush, of Gandhi, Thoreau, Nietzsche, and Martin Luther King Jr., with
the inspiration and strategic sense of each adjusted to the new circumstances of being.
The task is to inhabit several roles in more militant, visible, creative, and inspirational
ways, as we come to terms with their cumulative effects on the world.
The accumulation of rapid shifts in role performance might introduce new pressures
into the world. The goals in ascending order are: first, to induce cumulative changes in individual and
group conducts that shift the center of gravity in this or that way and encourage others to do so; second,
to push collective role assemblages in new directions; and third, to inspire initiatives that
draw energy from activity on these first two fronts to escalate both internal and external
pressures upon corporations, states, universities, churches and temples, investment
firms, the media, the Internet, and international organizations.
The initial potentialities are numerous. Consumers can, as the need and opportunity arises, alter patterns
of consumption with respect to food acquisition, vehicle use, housing, cuisine, clothing, and
entertainment, seeking to gear each mode more closely to a near future that reduces oil dependence,
improves food production, and curtails emissions, and also to inspire more active and intense support for
collective modes of consumption that reduce inequality within and between regions. Investors and
participants in retirement investment funds can readjust the priorities of those investments, as they also
organize to demand closer state regulation of volatile markets. Congregants within churches, temples,
synagogues, mosques, and madrassas can repudiate publicaliy the most ugly pronouncements and actions
taken by others in the name of theft faith, to shame those who have hijacked their creed for retrograde
means, and to press their own congregations to change their energy use, relations with other faiths, and
relations to corporations and the state. By doing so they also help to recompose the connection between
existential faith and drives to implacable revenge so prominent today. Experts in oil exploration,
sustainable energy production, electrical engineering, and automobile production can experiment with
new modes of transportation and energy use. Writers, Tv producers, actors, bloggers, and film directors
can infuse a gratitude for being more actively into their writing, films, and characters, seeking to
challenge cynical existential dispositions on the Left that come perilously close to the forces they would
resist. Veterans, who have experienced the horror of war up close, can relate that sense of horror to others,
while publicizing nonmilitary ways to engage contemporary issues. Reporters and dissident economists
can publicize microeconomic experiments in various corners of the world that could be extended,
exposing investors, consumers, and producers to a larger range of possibilities than generally recognized.
Teachers in schools and universities can teach students how the media work upon them daily at multiple
levels of the sensorium, and how they too can acquire sophisticated media skills.
The possibilities are endless. The point of individual and group experimentation with
role assignments is simultaneously to make a direct difference through our conduct, to
open us to new experiences that might alter our relational sensibilities even further, to
unscramble role assumptions assumed by others, to form operational connections with
others from which larger political movements might be generated, and to make
connections with noble role warriors in other regions and walks of life to enlarge the
space and visibility of positive action. A stated change in personal or constituency belief is not
enough since the layered embodiment of belief and the actual performance of roles are so closely bound
together. A belief is an embodied tendency to performance; concerted practices of performance
help to alter or intent efy belief; and new intensities of belief fold back into future desires, performative
priorities, and potentialities of political action. Such a spiral can produce positive as well as negative
effects. For example, an accumulation of resentments against states, corporations, and
consumers for their refusal to address global warming could eventually inspire a
cross-regional movement to launch simultaneous general strikes in several states.
Such dramatic actions are not apt to take place unless and until the spiritual ground has
been prepared and the unity of obstinate elites has been weakened. Effective role
adventurism helps. It builds a reservoir of public readiness for more militant action upon
and by civil society, state, and interstate institutions. As some churches modify their behavior
toward mosques, and vice versa, the door is open to form a cross-state citizen movement to modify the
practices of states and international organizations. As those movements coalesce, support for the
most bellicose forces on each side wanes. When those effects are consolidated, corporations,
churches, states, and international organizations are placed under yet more positive pressure, or
alternatively find it possible to take more risks, if and when such a machine becomes organized, each
pressure point begins to resonate with the others, creating a resonance machine larger than its parts.
At the early stages of such a movement, it
bellicosity and regional inequality in the name of freeing a self-regulating economy that
it pretends is waiting to emerge. Its politics is top down, war-like, and inegalitarian while
its doctrine celebrates the ever receding promise of world markets that thrive most when they are least
regulated. We, by contrast, must start in the middle of things and constituencies, pushing out
toward the authoritarian practices of the Right that already express with glee the moods
of negativity, hubris, or existential revenge. We have witnessed numerous examples of such
disappointing transitions in the last several decades, when a negative or authoritarian mood is retained
while the creed in which it was set is changed dramatically. We must therefore work on mood,
contributes to the development of complex critical perspectives and coalition-building skills, as well as
lessons learned by efforts to change the most elite, hierarchical structures (such as law review), may help
prepare such students for struggles in the hierarchically ordered lib- eral legal-political world we inhabit.
At the same time, progressive students in the Coalition and elsewhere add to Kennedys two left stances
an ability to treat law as only one thread in a web of relations of power and to bring their prior
experiences of sub- ordination, resistance, and critical thinking directly to bear on their law school
organizing. Both the liberal and radical stances Kennedy describes understand the law as the law
understands itself: as, for good or ill, the foundation of the house of power. This view, however, sustains
power relations by appealing only to the realm of law itself for resistance. The belief that law school, the
legal profession, and the law more generally are the sole, or even key, places for reproducing or undoing
hierarchy sets up this realm as the most significant place for work in confronting power, so that people
with legal skills continue to be held up as the most important ac- tors for social change.
As an alternative, progressive law students may use their involvement with the law to
participate in broader resistance practices. We have focused on connecting resistance
against legal hierarchy with the fight for racial justice, but of course there are many other kinds
of anti-subordina- tion struggles that can serve as the basis for a valuable praxis. Kennedys assessment of
the circuits of institutional self-replication remains a valu- able one; but left students who come to law
school need not choose between liberal naivete and radical alienation. Instead, law students
may draw on their experiences of hierarchy outside legal education to transform their
conditions of life, grounded in the knowledge of the necessity of constant struggle and
resistance.
which reveal the wrongness of the positions of the oppressor to itself and to the public
(White 1988).
White (1988, p. 765) posits that "fluency in the law" which she describes as a "deep practical
understanding of law as a discourse for articulating norms of justice and an array of rituals for resolving
social conflict" is beneficial for the type of work that she describes: "An understanding of law as
discourse on norms will help [the "outsider"] work with the clients to deepen their own
consciousness of their injuries and their needs. Knowledge of the law's procedural
rituals will give the group access to a central arena for public resistance and challenge."
Monolith/Closure DA Ext.
Specific to lawyering
Grinthal 11 (J.D. 2006, Harvard Law School; M.P.A. 2006, Harvard John F. Kennedy School of Government.
Senior Staff Attorney, South Brooklyn Legal Services.)
(Michael, POWER WITH: PRACTICE MODELS FOR SOCIAL JUSTICE LAWYERING, University of
Pennsylvania Journal of Law and Social Change, 15 U. Pa. J.L. & Soc. Change 25, LN)
There is truth to these criticisms. As Bill Quigley quoted one veteran organizer, "In my 25 years of
experience, I find that lawyers create dependency. The lawyers want to advocate for others and do not
understand the goal of giving a people a sense of their own power." n51 But there is also overreaction.
relationships. Lawyers, like pastors, shop stewards, teachers, block captains, grandparents, etc., tend to
have relationships with many people. In a poor community, the local legal services lawyer may be the
only relationship that numerous tenants, benefit recipients, or laid-off workers have in common. The
lawyer is the first to see changes in the local community or economy in the pattern of clients coming
through the door. In addition, because lawyers so often mediate between their clients and powerful
institutions, they know the local decision-makers and resource controllers. n53 Experienced lawyers walk
around with robust power maps in their heads, [*42] developed through repeated interactions with
institutions; they know the real procedures by which agencies make decisions - who is influential, what
their values and interests are, who is coming up, and who is on their way out - in addition to the official
written procedures that community leaders can discover through diligent research.
Once it may have been the parish priest who played these roles. And it may bode poorly for our society if
they have shifted to the lawyer. But the answer, rather than delivering eulogies for civil society, must be
to draw lawyers out into networks of relationship and interdependency, to enable them to share their
hoard of social capital - a hoard many do not want to keep to themselves, but simply do not know how to
redistribute. The lawyer, like the priest, is often the loneliest person that knows everybody, and this ought
to have any decent organizer salivating.
Access to Legal Forums
The lawyer's privileged access to courtrooms and other institutional forums is a scarce
resource that they alone can make available to organizing efforts. Most people do not have to be told
how valuable this resource can be; even organizers who scorn litigation cannot entirely avoid
criminal charges, collateral civil attacks, and the transactional requirements of group
development. More fundamentally, all organizing efforts at some point seek recognition, n54 and
recognition is often formal, whether legal (as when a union is recognized by the National Labor Relations
Board) or private but rule-bound (as when a corporation allows a proxy organization onto the agenda of
its shareholders' meeting). Formal recognition is often an important step in exercising power (though it is
unfortunately almost as often confused with power itself), and lawyers are given privileged access to its
processes. Under current law, at least, lawyers cannot simply give this access away to nonmembers of the
bar. The only way they can redistribute their privilege is to enter into relationships through which their
access is mobilized and held accountable by a group decision-making process.
about the law, analysts often bundle and collapse legal cooptation claims rather than differentiate among myriad, distinct sets of concerns. When claims about the failures of
legal reform are unbundled, they provide a window into our assumptions about the possibilities and rhythms of change in general, not merely change via the path of the law.
Accordingly, this Article asserts that contemporary critical legal consciousness has eclipsed the origins of critical theory, which situated various forms of social action - all of
which potentially have cooptive as well as transformative effects - on more equal grounds.
The inquiry begins by delineating three periods of social reform activism, their relationship to legal reform, and their successes and failures as perceived by legal scholars. Part
II describes the first two periods, which have served contemporary thinkers as paradigmatic moments for analyzing the failures of legal reform and the negative consequences
that followed the decline of social activism. The first period is the New Deal labor movement, which achieved statutory reordering of labor relations yet was ultimately
criticized for creating a hostile environment for collective bargaining and for leading to the sharp decline of unionism. The second period is the civil rights movement of the
1950s and 1960s, which achieved widespread recognition for its legislative and judicial victories yet has been widely critiqued for its limited success in eliminating racial
injustice. In both cases, cooptation analysis focuses not simply on the limits of the legal victories but also, and often primarily, on the pacification of the social movement and
the decline of a reform vision, which resulted from the perceived successes of legislative and judicial victories. Pointing to these two "failed successes," contemporary legal
scholars express a now-axiomatic skepticism about law's ability to produce social transformation. Drawing on the critical scholarship that has developed in relation to these two
periods, Part II unpacks the arguments about legal cooptation, demonstrating that they are not monolithic but rather constitute distinct sets of claims, including concerns about
resources and energy, framing and fragmentation, lawyering and professionalism, [*941] crowding-out effects, institutional limitations, and the unsubstantiated legitimation of
existing social arrangements.
As a result of an emerging truism about the limitations of legal reform - captured by the reference to legalism as the "hollow hope" n2 - contemporary critics warn against a
reliance on law, courts, legal language, and lawyers in the struggles of social movements. Part III describes a third period, this one involving extralegal activism, as it is
represented and celebrated in legal scholarship. In mapping the landscape of this "alternative scholarship," three distinct types of extralegal strategies emerge: first, the
redefinition of the purpose of the legal system as promoting secondary goals rather than primary ones; second, the move away from the legal arena to an extralegal sphere of
action, often evoking the notion of civil society; and third, the expansion of the meanings of law and legality, building on earlier understandings of the legal pluralism school of
thought.
After exploring the underlying assumptions of each of these proposals with regard to the limits of law and the limits of change, this Article revisits the concept of cooptation
within the broader range of possibilities for social struggle. Rather than dismissing concerns about legal cooptation, Part IV asserts that the emerging umbrella school of thought
draws erroneous conclusions from critical understandings and presents false alternatives in the gamut of law and social change. A more accurate inquiry into the limits of change
extralegal activism
proponents misrepresent alternative avenues of activism as solutions to cooptation
concerns by overlooking the risks of cooptation present in extralegal activism.
Consequently, a counter "myth of engagement" is reified by the rejection of the "myth of
law." Not only is the idea of avoiding legal strategies as a means of social change misdirected,
but such a construction also conceals the ways in which the law continues to exist in the
background of the envisioned alternatives. Thus, earlier critical insights about the ongoing
importance of law in seemingly unregulated spheres are lost in the contemporary message. Further, the
idea of opting out of the legal arena fails to recognize a reality of growing
interpenetration and blurring of boundaries between private and public spheres, for-profit
and nonprofit actors, and formal and informal institutions. Most importantly, a theory of avoidance
contributes to a conservative rhetoric about the decline of the state, the necessities of
deregulation, and the inevitability of mounting inequalities. The Article reveals a
should cast doubt on the privileged role of extralegal activism that is trumpeted in contemporary writings. This Article demonstrates how
contemporary false equation of formal legal reform avenues with a conservative status quo and of
informal - that is, extralegal - avenues with transformative progress. The movement to extralegal
activism has unwittingly aligned itself with concepts such as civil society revivalism,
informality, and nongovernmental norm generation. All of these concepts are associated with
decreasing commitments of the state, privatization, deregulation, and devolution of
governmental authority in the social arena. All three brands of extralegal strategies reflect not
only disillusionment with and disappointment in the legal system as a potential engine for social reform,
but also imply path dependency with current economic realities and shifting commitments of the state in
an era of globalization.
Since the critique of legal cooptation asserts that legal reform, even when viewed as successful,
is never radically transformative, it is equally crucial to ask what criteria are available for
assessing the success of the suggested alternatives. As this Article argues, the risks of extralegal
cooptation are similar to the risks of legal cooptation. However, the allure of an alternative model
of progressive politics that would avoid the critical risks of cooptation has prevented its advocates
from scrutinizing it in the same way that legal strategies are routinely questioned.
Therefore, the new wave of extralegal politics risks entailing no more than a loser's ex post selfmystification. Posing these challenges, Part V concludes that much of the contemporary alternative
scholarship obscures the lines between description and prescription in the exploration and formulation of
transformative politics.