Decentralization: Difference between revisions
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<p><span style="">''' | <p><span style="">'''Decentralized organizations '''often</span><span style=""> emerge spontaneously and quickly during a social crisis. </span><span style="">Organizations whose components and/or structure are decentralized leave great autonomy to activists. M</span><span style="">ovements that come from the most decentralized organizations are those that are uncoordinated and that spread spontaneously during a crisis. </span><span style="">It is possible that this is subsequently (more or less) coordinated by a group that emerges from the movement. </span><span style="">It will then be slightly centralized (as soon as there is coordination, there is a form of centralization). </span></p> | ||
<p><br></p> | <p><br></p> | ||
<p>''<span style="">Example: Black Lives Matter (protests) >> Movement for Black Lives (distributed organization)</span>''</p> | <p>''<span style="">Example: Black Lives Matter (protests) >> Movement for Black Lives (distributed organization)</span>''</p> |
Revision as of 00:23, 14 August 2022
Decentralized organizations often emerge spontaneously and quickly during a social crisis. Organizations whose components and/or structure are decentralized leave great autonomy to activists. Movements that come from the most decentralized organizations are those that are uncoordinated and that spread spontaneously during a crisis. It is possible that this is subsequently (more or less) coordinated by a group that emerges from the movement. It will then be slightly centralized (as soon as there is coordination, there is a form of centralization).
Example: Black Lives Matter (protests) >> Movement for Black Lives (distributed organization)
-This is an Uprising by Paul and Mark Engler and the HUB
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