Is Freedom on Our Horizon?

New Imperatives for Community Organizing

Authors

  • Francis Calpotura In-Advance

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.71057/hbkps690

Keywords:

field theory, horizon-conscious organizing, migration, immigration, remittances, transformative organizing

Abstract

This is a narrative essay written by Francis Calpotura, an experienced community organizer reflecting on lessons from his career, his family’s migration experience, and his assessment of what future successful organizing will require. Calpotura’s focus is an underlying tension in democratic organizing praxis: the tradeoffs between the work required for immediate issue actions, that engage and train members, and systemic transformation for durable social equality. Drawing from the works of Norma Wong and Doug McAdam, Calpotura proposes that organizations collaborate on emergent “horizon-conscious” strategy: a theoretical framework and tool for how organizers can work towards a co-created future, beyond the wins and losses of particular campaigns. In confronting this tradeoff, his approach honors the organizing profession’s cultivation of both individual liberation and shared political empowerment.

Author Biography

  • Francis Calpotura, In-Advance

    After living in Oakland for the past 41 years, Francis Calpotura is now based in Philadelphia to establish a center that will house a residency program for seasoned organizers. The Center is named Coruscant after the planet home of the Jedi Academy (in Star Wars lore). According to Francis, “After all, even Jedis need to reconnect with the Force.” He currently is the Co-Director of In-Advance, a movement infrastructure seeking to resuscitate the heart of organizing. Francis was previously Co-Director at the Center for Third World Organizing and Executive Director of TIGRA: Transnational Institute for Grassroots Research and Action. 

References

Building Movement Project. 2024. Reckoning with Sustainability: Black Leaders Reflect on 2020, the Funding Cliff, and Organizing Infrastructure. https://buildingmovement.org/blog/sustain-blk-organizing/.

Calpotura, Francis. 2007. “The Real Immigration Debate: Tackle Economic Security, Not Simply Border Security.” In Motion Magazine, July 29. https://inmotionmagazine.com/hrcr/fc_ri.html.

Calpotura, Francis, and Kim Fellner. 1996. Square Pegs Find Their Groove: Reshaping the Organizing Circle. Center for Third World Organizing.

Chenoweth, Erica. 2020. “The Future of Nonviolent Resistance.” Journal of Democracy 31 (3): 69–84. https://doi.org/10.1353/jod.2020.0046.

Fligstein, Neil, and Doug McAdam. 2015. A Theory of Fields. Oxford University Press.

McAdam, Doug, and Francis Calpotura. 2022. “The Importance of Vulnerable ‘Fields’ to Systems Change.” Unpublished manuscript.

Ratha, Dilip. 2005. Back to Basics: Remittances: A Lifeline for Development. International Monetary Fund.

Razza, Connie, Cristina Jiménez, Deborah Axt, Lissy Romanow, Nsé Ufot, and Travon Anderson. 2024. Fighting Shape: An Assessment of U.S. Organizing. An interim report from the Strengthening Organizing Project of Future Currents.

Thompson, Gabriel. 2006. “The Next Frontier of Economic Justice.” ColorLines Magazine, March 21.

Wong, Norma Kawelokū. 2024. When No Thing Works: A Zen and Indigenous Perspective on Resilience, Shared Purpose, and Leadership in the Timeplace of Collapse. North Atlantic Books.

Published

2026-02-13

How to Cite

Is Freedom on Our Horizon? New Imperatives for Community Organizing. (2026). Community Organizing Journal, 1(2). https://doi.org/10.71057/hbkps690