The first edition of Progressive Community Organizing was a splendid and relatively unique community organizing text in a field that has sparked a great deal of recent interest. The second edition, significantly revised and expanded, is even better. My favorite aspects are how Loretta Pyles grounds the study of community-organization practice in the ideas and contexts that shape contemporary efforts. Progressive Community Organizing is especially strong on the importance of theory to practice, an area most books minimize or ignore. This is a highly accessible and informative read, chock full of valuable insights from an experienced and gifted teacher and practitioner.
-Robert Fisher, PhD, professor and chair of community organization at the University of Connecticut School of Social Work, and author of Let the People Decide
Pyles's work is a critical text for students, educators, and practitioners of transformative community organizing. Drawing upon theory and practice, Pyles details the multiple levels-individual, organizational and societal-at which transformation must occur to build movements for lasting comprehensive change.
-Laura J. Wernick, PhD, assistant professor at the Fordham University School of Social Service
With each page of Progressive Community Organizing, Loretta Pyles reminds us of what organizing can be at its best. This is the book I had always hoped to find-one that makes the connections between organizing, critical theory, and social services. It is a story about community organizing as a way of being, linking practice with the philosophy, critical thinking, disaster relief, and the workings of social movements. Social work students should read and be inspired by this seminal work.
-Benjamin Shepard, PhD, LMSW, associate professor, human services department, CUNY/NYC College of Technology and advocacy chair of the National Organization of Human Services
This book is a bracing antidote to the trend within community organizing circles to accommodate to the pressures of neo-liberalism. It links community organizing to its social justice ideals and social movement roots-in theory and practice-and provides valuable insights regarding the application of its progressive tradition to the contemporary environment.
-Michael Reisch, PhD, MSW, Daniel Thursz Distinguished Professor of Social Justice at the University of Maryland School of Social Work
Pyles's welcome second edition updates, deepens, and expands the theory and practice of community organizing. It continues and contemporizes the essence of the community-organizing method using understandable language grounded in social work values of social and economic justice. The new case studies, concepts, and methods of intervention will be as valuable and appreciated by students, field instructors and faculty as was the first edition.
-Terry Mizrahi, PhD, MSW, professor at the Silberman School of Social Work at Hunter College and director of the Education Center for Community Organizing