3 - Outside of Ourselves
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 May 2022
Summary
When I (re)entered the community sector in Aotearoa New Zealand as both academic and activist, I was met with a community sector facing immense contemporary challenges for survival. My initial discussions with community members, as I have mentioned in Part I, highlighted a growing despair at the lack of ‘bite’ of the sector and concern for the ways it had become subservient to the power of neoliberalism. Nevertheless, there was still a strong sense that activism continued to be a vital dimension of the community sector and without some form of activism or advocacy that the community sector was failing to live up to its social promise. In both my conversations with people in different parts of the sector and in the collective, I observed that being part of the community sector was also a deeply cherished aspect of the self. Activist identity was often intimately interconnected with the community sector, but the influence of neoliberalism on the sector had caused many of my participants and colleagues to question whether this sense of ‘activist’ was lost. The community sector, including the collective, was grappling with a possible loss of radical social change and outsider activism.
During my conversations with a broad range of community sector activists, before I started volunteering with the collective, I eagerly gathered their perspectives about the community sector and its role in social change. Most of the issues raised by my participants seemed familiar to those I’d already encountered in the academic literature. My participants enthusiastically told me about the immeasurable and positive contributions the community sector made by supporting communities across our country. Kelly described this well when she told me:
‘[In the community sector] it is the people who live in those communities that make the decisions … there is a really personal connection and it is local … I don't think the government responds with such heart that the people on the ground actually have, because it is the stuff they care about.’
The tales my participants shared with me, however, were always enmeshed in a palpable concern regarding the vast difficulties facing many community organizations in Aotearoa New Zealand.
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- Reimagining Academic ActivismLearning from Feminist Anti-Violence Activists, pp. 33 - 52Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2021