Affinity Groups: An Introduction
Affinity Groups: An Introduction
Medical - An affinity group may want to have someone who is a trained street medic who can
deal with any medical or health issues during the action.
Legal observer - If there are not already legal observers for an action, it may be important to
have people not involved in the action taking notes on police conduct and possible violations
of activists rights.
Media - If you are doing an action which plans to draw media, a person in the affinity group
could be empowered to talk to the media and act as a spokesperson.
Action Elf/Vibes-watcher - This is someone who would help out with the general wellness of
the group: water, massages, and encouragement through starting a song or cheer. This is not a
role is necessary, but may be particularly helpful in day long actions where people might get
tired or irritable as the day wears on.
Traffic - If it is a moving affinity group, it may be necessary to have people who are
empowered to stop cars at intersections and in general watch out for the safety of people on
the streets from cars and other vehicles.
Arrest-able members - This depends on what kind of direct action you are doing. Some
actions may require a certain number of people willing to get arrested, or some parts of an
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action may need a minimum number of arrest-ables. Either way, it is important to know who
is doing the action and plans on getting arrested.
Jail support - Again, this is only if you have an affinity group who has people getting
arrested. This person has all the arrestees contact information and will go to the jail, talk to
and work with lawyers, keep track of who got arrested etc.
Affinity groups are not just useful within a protest or direct action setting, this form of
organisation can be used for a wide variety of purposes as the history of affinity groups below
illustrates.
Small circles of good friends, called "tertulias" would meet at cafes to discuss ideas and plan
actions. In 1888, a period of intense class conflict in Europe and of local insurrection and
struggle in Spain, the Anarchist Organisation of the Spanish Region made this traditional
form (tertulias) the basis of its organisation.
Decades later, the Iberian Anarchist Federation, which contained 50,000 activists, organised
into affinity groups and confederated into local, regional, and national councils. Wherever
several FAI affinity groups existed, they formed a local federation. Local federations were
coordinated by committees were made up of one mandated delegate from each affinity group.
Mandated delegates were sent from local federations to regional committees and finally to the
Peninsular Committee. Affinity groups remained autonomous as they carried out education,
organised and supported local struggles. The intimacy of the groups made police infiltration
difficult.
The idea of large-scale affinity group based organisation was planted in the United States on
April 30, 1977 when 2,500 people, organised into affinity groups, occupied the Seabrook,
New Hampshire nuclear power plant. The growing anti-nuclear power and disarmament
movements adopted this mode, and used it in many successful actions throughout the late
1970s and 1980s. Since then, it has been used by the Central America solidarity movement,
lesbian/gay liberation movement, Earth First! and earth liberation movement, and many
others.
Most recently, affinity groups have been used in the mass actions in Seattle for the WTO and
Washington DC for the IMF and World Bank, as well as Philadelphia and Los Angles around
the Republican and Democratic National Conventions.
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A spokescouncil is the larger organising structure used in the affinity group model to
coordinate a mass action. Each affinity group (or cluster) empowers a spoke (representative)
to go to a spokescouncil meeting to decide on important issues for the action. For instance,
affinity groups need to decide on a legal/jail strategy, possible tactical issues, meeting places,
and many other logistics. A spokescouncil does not take away an individual affinity group's
autonomy within an action; affinity groups make there own decisions about what they want to
do on the streets.
If you are forming an affinity group in your city or town, find friends or fellow activists who
have similar issue interests, and thus would want to go to similar actions. Also, look for
people who would be willing to use similar tactics - if you want to do relatively high risk
lockdowns, someone who does not want to be in that situation may not want to be in the
affinity group. That person could do media or medic work, but it may not be best if they are
completely uncomfortable around certain tactics of direct action.
If you are looking to join an affinity group at a mass action, first find out what affinity groups
open to new members and which ones are closed. For many people, affinity groups are based
on trusting relationships based around years of friendship and work, thus they might not want
people they don't know in their affinity group. Once you find which affinity groups are open,
look for ones that have an issue interest or action tactic that you are drawn to.
What makes affinity groups so effective for actions is that they can remain creative and
independent and plan out their own action without an organisation or person dictating to them
what can and can't be done. Thus, there are an endless amount of possibilities for what
affinity groups can do. Be creative and remember: direct action gets the goods!
This text was taken and edited from Anarchism in Action by Shawn Ewald
Edited by libcom.org. Last reviewed 2006
Posted By
https://libcom.org/organise/affinity-groups-an-introduction
Steven.
Nov 13 2003 18:45
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Demonstrations and law enforcement
o Demonstrations guide
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Affinity groups
Affinity groups: an introduction
Small group direct action advice
Blockading: a guide
Scaffold tripods guide
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