In western New York, neighbors blockaded a home to prevent a woman鈥檚 eviction. In the Midwest, tenants packed a budget hearing and won concessions. In the South, demonstrators temporarily shut down an eviction court and city hall.
Across the country, actions like these show tenant organizations playing an increasingly important role as a source of local political power in economically and racially marginalized communities, according to new research co-authored by , associate professor of government in the 麻豆视频 and 麻豆视频 and in the Cornell Jeb E. Brooks School of Public Policy, where she serves as associate dean of public engagement.
Such groups have gained visibility as housing insecurity worsened during the pandemic, but have long been neglected by political scientists, Michener and Mallory SoRelle, M.A. 鈥14, Ph.D. 鈥16, an assistant professor at Duke University, argue in 鈥,鈥 published Feb. 14 in Interest Groups and Advocacy.
鈥淭hese organizations explicitly center the needs and perspectives of vulnerable members,鈥 they write. 鈥淎s such, tenant organizations provide a model for positive political power building for otherwise marginalized constituents.鈥
To better understand tenant organizations鈥 origins, structure and politics, Michener and SoRelle interviewed members of nearly 40 groups and observed their meetings (virtually) over eight months starting in the fall of 2020.
At that time, the researchers said, renters faced eviction in 鈥渟taggering鈥 numbers, as about one in five 鈥 more than 10 million people 鈥 fell behind on rent payments, even after multiple rounds of federal COVID-19 relief checks.
Despite a nationwide moratorium on evictions ordered by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in September 2020, they said, tens of thousands of families are estimated to have been evicted when landlords ignored the ban or states failed to enforce it consistently.
Tenant organizations, the scholars write, often serve residents who live in or near poverty, work in low-wage jobs and may have encountered welfare or criminal justice institutions 鈥 populations 鈥渋n the crosshairs of social and political exclusion.鈥
Despite those disadvantages, the researchers found tenant organizations create opportunities for those 鈥渕arginal denizens to engage in critical forms of politics and to build political power in their communities.鈥
Participants in the events described above, for example, said their activism generated pressure that had influenced landlord-tenant dynamics or led to changes in rules or legislation, resulting in fewer evictions. In some places they drove a reevaluation of law enforcement鈥檚 involvement in eviction proceedings.
Yet Michener and SoRelle say tenant organizations have largely escaped scholars鈥 notice because of hybrid structures that don鈥檛 fit neatly into existing research categories focused on interest and advocacy groups.
鈥淧olitical scientists have largely neglected tenants as political actors,鈥 they write. 鈥淲hen scholars fail to consider organizing that takes a form distinct from traditional interest group or movement organizations, we fail to identify crucial sources of political power for the most precarious communities.鈥
Structurally, most of the tenant organizations studied had little or no paid staff. Decision-making was 鈥渉orizontal,鈥 prioritizing broad participation. They chose not to accept funding from foundations or government agencies to preserve their autonomy, relying on volunteers, membership dues and public donations.
Many of the groups were distrustful of formal political systems. They were critical of advocacy organizations and what some called 鈥渢he nonprofit industrial complex,鈥 which they believed would water down their agenda and existed to provide services or distribute resources, not build power.
As one umbrella organization for a network of tenant unions put it: 鈥淲e fight for tenants, not for housing.鈥
Michener and SoRelle find tenant groups鈥 political engagement can have 鈥減rofound repercussions鈥 for local politics, warranting greater attention from social scientists.
鈥淎 close look at tenant organizations usefully expands our understanding of local political life,鈥 they write, 鈥減articularly in marginalized communities.鈥
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