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three - Love always wins: All Out’s campaign for equality everywhere

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 March 2022

Nathan Manning
Affiliation:
University of York
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Summary

Introduction

Andre Banks is co-founder and executive director of All Out (www. allout.org). The organisation was established in 2010 with Jeremy Heimans and works to promote equality for lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) people around the world. All Out uses online organising strategies to build a global membership that directly contributes power and resources to local organisations fighting against discrimination. All Out now has over two million members and has been involved in several high-profile campaigns, most recently using the Sochi 2014 Winter Olympic Games to highlight Russia's ‘gay propaganda’ ban.

For those whose work has a focus on practice, finding the time and space to down tools and write can be extremely difficult. Not to mention some of the cultural biases that operate to devalue writing and thinking relative to ‘doing’. So it came to pass that Nathan interviewed Andre for his contribution to this collection.

Nathan: Can you provide some biographical details about how you came to be involved in activism and campaigning – maybe how you even got interested in politics?

Andre: Almost all of my interventions into politics have been through the lens of identity, as opposed to issues. I don't think I planned for that to be the case, but when I look back on my career a lot of it has been about identity-driven campaigning. And I think as a working-class, Black, gay American all of those identities have been a big part of why I got into organising and campaigning. […]

I had been interested in politics and I had definitely been going through a period of trying to understand and read and think about what it meant to be a critically engaged Black person in America. Reading all the things that people of that age read when you’re Black, like James Baldwin, and really trying to understand and make sense of this unique set of identities. I think that was how I got involved with the Black student union at Ohio State. It was kind of a social group but it was also pretty politicised; they’d done a lot of work in the previous year on the diversity plan on campus and making sure that Ohio State was a great place for students of all races and ethnicities. So there was a political element to the group which I think was what I was most attracted to.

Type
Chapter
Information
Political (Dis)Engagement
The Changing Nature of the 'Political'
, pp. 53 - 76
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Print publication year: 2015

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