27 October 2017 Organising’s back… and that’s good news for campaigners Matt Price has a new book about engagement organising – the process of building engaged and powerful networks full of leaders. Read Tom Liacas's review now. by Tom Liacas
25 October 2017 CANVAS: Stopping the autocrats with creative activism Can creativity and training organise people to take on autocrats, grow people power and inspire movements? Hear what Srdja Popovic of CANVAS has to say. by Ted Fickes
17 October 2017 Social ties: A scalable and powerful organising resource In this session of MobLab Live, political scientists and campaigners discuss how social ties can scale to build powerful relationships and support change. by MobLab Team
6 October 2017 ChangeMakers Podcast: Fight for 15 and a people’s movement for a living wage The story of Fight for 15 kicks off ChangeMakers, a new podcast supported by MobLab sharing unheard stories of people-powered change around the world. by Lisa Goldman
9 August 2017 How nonviolent grassroots mobilisation worked in East Jerusalem July 2017 saw a nonviolent mobilisation in East Jerusalem as Palestineans of multiple faiths led two weeks of boycotts and nonviolent actions. by Lisa Goldman
7 July 2017 New wave Russian activism in wake of a massive resettlement scheme Russian activism is finding new energy as a government plan to demolish housing for over a million people is helping mobilise citizen action. by Natalia Antonova
6 April 2017 Growth hacking for NGOs: Building movements with volunteers Julie Szabo explains people powered growth hacking: how organisations are able to scale activism and impact by empowering volunteers to organise and lead. by Julie Szabo
17 February 2017 From burning platform to building people power: Lessons from Greenpeace’s Mobilisation Lab What we learned over five years of transforming Greenpeace and building people power around the globe. by Jed Miller and Cynthia Gibson
26 January 2017 What it means when victims lead (and why it matters) How campaigners in Uganda, Hungary and the United States are creating stronger campaigns by becoming allies of victims and giving them power to lead. by Phil Wilmot