Ruckus Society
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
To meet Wikipedia's quality standards and conform with our NPOV policy, this article or section may require cleanup. The current version of this article or section is written in an informal style and with a personally invested tone. It reads more like a story than an encyclopedia entry. Please see specific examples noted on the talk page. Editing help is available. |
The Ruckus Society | |
---|---|
Type | Non Profit |
Founded | 1995, Mount Hood National Forest, Oregon |
Headquarters | Oakland, CA |
Key people | Mike Roselle (co-founder), John Sellers, Adrienne Maree Brown |
Industry | Activism |
Products | strategic nonviolent direct action, Internet activism, civil disobedience |
Revenue | $600,000 |
Employees | 5 [1] |
Website | www.ruckus.org |
The Ruckus Society is an organization that sponsors skill-sharing and direct action training camps for activists from impacted communities working on social justice, human rights and environmental justice. Ruckus was founded by Mike Roselle and co-founded with Twilly Cannon and JR Roof to specialize in environmental activism and Guerrilla communication.
The Ruckus Society has created and inspired untold amounts of direct actions around the country. Ruckus co-sponsors the Not Your Soldier Project (NYS), a counter-recruitment effort with the War Resisters League, and the Indigenous Peoples' Power Project (IP3), bringing together indigenous youth organizers from all over the country. In 2006, Ruckus teamed up with Working Assets for an Election Protection project [2]. Together with Global Exchange and Rainforest Action Network, they worked against Ford Motor Company and later other auto-manufacturers [3] .
The Ruckus Society is a member of numerous coalitions efforts, and have performed actions for Wal-Mart Watch and others. The group has provided training to Greenpeace, Patagonia, Inc., the California Faculty Association, United Students Against Sweatshops, Students for Bhopal, Student Farmworker Alliance, the Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition, Students for a Free Tibet, Detroit Summer and more.
John Sellers was the executive director of the organization for 8 years, through the World Trade Organization protests in Seattle in 1999, the creation of IP3 and NYS and his own $2 million bail. Adrienne Maree Brown came on as executive director in 2006, the first woman of color to lead the organization.
[edit] External links
This article about a political organization is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |