Exercises

Knowing Your Community

Can you think of five communities that you consider yourself a part of?


Start with a simple writing exercise. 

Identifying Community Needs

Once you identify your community, it's best to also understand and identify your community's needs. It's important that a sense of "needs" comes from within a given community. Members of the community can develop a list of needs, starting with questions like:


The next section will describe some more detailed aspects of identifying community needs, including work and non-work context as well as barriers.

In the workplace / context of work

Start by mapping your workplace:


Once you have a list of everyone and where they work, get in touch with them for informal, 1:1 conversations: How's it going at work? What are some questions they have? Is anything going wrong with them or their team? How are things outside of work?


Also use any mechanisms in your workplace for anonymous (or semi-anonymous) responses, such as a poll or suggestion box. This may work better at large organizations or in situations where it's not easy to identify people who wish to remain anonymous. To account for this possibility, only collect as much information as you need! For a suggestion box, this means collecting comments and nothing else.


Take stock of the conversations and comments: What issues matter to your coworkers?

Outside the context of work

Use a variety of approaches to learn more about issues and experiences that affect members of what you identify as your community.


Consider also the existing community infrastructure:


Take stock of what you learn: What issues matter to your friends and neighbors?

Barriers to identifying needs

There can be numerous barriers to identifying needs, including:


It can be difficult to identify a truly shared issue or concern, for example if a community is divided about one or more needs. Not all concerns translate directly to a clear need, and another challenge may be identifying the near- or long-term nature of a need.

Threat Modeling

To identify barriers to mutual aid organizing in your workplace, start with a two-part exercise:



Next we'll describe some possible outcomes in and out the context of work.

In the workplace / context of work

There are several threats or barriers to organizing mutual aid in the workplace:

Considering Community in Institutional Contexts

What can you learn by considering the relationship between your mutual aid effort in a greater institutional context? Consider your relationship with your fellow workers. This is a critical first step.


Connecting with your co-workers


Identifying your co-workers' needs


Identifying your positionality and relationships


Navigating your workplace structures


Identifying challenges and barriers


Getting organized


Something unique about doing mutual aid at work is coming up against the institutions (workplaces, professional orgs, schools), the fear of burning bridges with people on whom you depend for economic survival.