Community organizing became an integral part of the activist repertoire of the New Left in the 1960s. Students for a Democratic Society, along with organizers in numerous low-income, racially diverse urban neighborhoods, sought to build an interracial movement of the poor through which to demand social and political change. Rejecting the strategies of the old left and labor movement and inspired by the Civil Rights Movement, activists sought to form a broader and more powerful coalition, actively synthesizing emerging identity politics with class and coalition politics and with a drive for a more participatory welfare state. In her study of activism before the age of identity politics, Frost has given us the first full-fledged history of what was arguably the most innovative community organizing campaign in postwar American history.
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