Sunday, March 25, 2012

Service Learning Blog

As far as my activism goes for this week I have spent a lot of time at meetings. We met after class on Thursday to discuss how much one on one time we have with our community partners and to discuss the upcoming event. Afterwards I had a brief meeting with the fundraising committee to decide on some things to do to raise money. Knowing that raising money for rakes, shovels, and shirts is a lot to take on we decided to focus this upcoming week on rakes and shovels and then dedicate our time after the event on the shirts. I think that we were very successful this meeting on having open communication, but unfortunately I think that we fall short on everyone as a group meeting up together. Everyone has very busy schedules, me included, and I can see that as a main concern for now. I now understand how it may be hard for activists and their different events they put on to raise awareness. Everyone runs on such different time that scheduling is probably a huge concern for many women's organizations.

Before this class I knew very little about the Farm Worker population and that is where I think that this project works best with activism. I think that the whole point is to bring awareness to certain issues and by pointing out the difficulties the Farm Worker population faces I have learned a lot and I have been able to educate others a lot as well. I think it is interesting when Ann Russo talks about white feminists and how we don't consider racism our issue (Russo, 299). I think that it is important to put aside issues of race and culture to join together in an equal relationship as women. We must first unite under common struggles and goals and then once that is done then we can begin to address those issues together.

I think that this project relates to Global Feminism because no matter where we come from and what we do, as women we can all relate to the same struggles. The whole point to feminism and to activism is to concentrate on a goal and achieve that goal no matter the differences we may have. I think that I am and will continue to understand a different community which I did not know about before and grow because of it.

Mohanty, Chandra Talpade, Ann Russo, and Lourdes Torres. Third World Women and the Politics of Feminism. Bloomington: Indiana UP, 1991. Print.

Word Count: 400

Thursday, March 15, 2012

New Service Learning Proposal

Mission Statement: To fight for agricultural justice and women’s rights in the farmworker community through fundraising and volunteering with YAYA and communication and cooperation with our forthcoming global partner.

Organizational Structure:

Secretary: maintains records (including attendance) and Google group

Scheduler: maintains calendar and plans event attendance.

Task-based committees (headed by a Committee Chairperson who acts as liaison for the committee and ensures meeting efficiency)

Task-based committees (headed by a Committee Chairperson who acts as liaison for the committee and ensures meeting efficiency)

Community partner liaisons (2): communicate with community partners and attend YAYA meetings

Global partner liaisons (2): work with fundraising committee

Ethics Committee (3): ensures mindful action, implements “three strike” policy

Three Strike Policy:

• Failure to complete a task or attend a designated event results in one strike

• First and second strikes result in voting restrictions

• Three strikes results in a meeting with the ethics committee and Professor Tweed Fundraising Organizers (4): responsible for coordinating an event and/or delegating responsibilities to other members to ensure that we are able to provide at least $190 (for food), 19 rakes and 19 shovels to the YAYA community garden project.

Members are accountable for their own attendance and participation. If a member is unable to attend an event, she or he must notify the scheduler. The Ethics Committee and “three strike” policy were conceived to deal with situations where a member fails to meet these standards. Democratically structured, our group focuses on working with our community. We have modeled our organizational strategy based on NGOs who use task-based committees to foster efficient goal achievement. Women, Food, and Agriculture Network (WFAN)-- as discussed in Women’s Activism and Globalization-- employ a similar structure, fostering personal responsibility in order to “instigate change” by building community and sustaining relationships with farmworkers (144). Our ethics committee is cognate to the UN, in that it will monitor the efficacy and ethical compliance of our project. Just as in “Unlikely Godmother,” Margaret Snyder characterizes the United Nations as a “godmother,” which acted as a guardian and advocate for women’s issues (25). We are facing the global challenge of migrant farmworker rights based on local realities, specifically the lack of resources to farmworkers in the community of Fellsmere, FL. We will be participating in discussion that takes place on a global level with our global partner. By building solidarity between our local and global partners, and ourselves, we will either discover or develop new ideas to cater to the needs of the farmworker population.

Every member is accountable for his or her own attendance and participation. If a member is unable to attend an event, they must notify the scheduler. The Ethics Committee and “three strike” policy were conceived to deal with situations in which a member fails to be accountable for themselves.

Group effectiveness will be measured by involvement of the majority of class members at each event, as well as our ability to fulfill each of the goals we have set. We are also considering the individual gains of each class member, outside of the group as a whole, to be an accomplishment of overall group effectiveness. This includes phone banking with YAYA, fundraising, and planning. We will also strive to maintain sincere communication and ethical interactions with each other and our community partners. We will assess ourselves via individual surveys on group effectiveness.

Community Partner/Global Theme Profile:

We propose to address the larger systemic issues of the treatment of farmworkers, with an emphasis on women farmworkers. We know that "women produce 70% of the food on earth but they are marginalized and oppressed by neoliberalism and patriarchy" (What Is 1). These systems of oppression often deny those who produce the food equal access to the products they produce. As the price of food increases and becomes scarcer, women become malnourished, "as they eat last after providing for their children and family members" (Desai 21). One possible way of addressing this issue is to "produce food for local consumption" (Desai 24). To lay a foundation for both environmental and production sustainability, it is key that the community eats the food it grows. Local production and consumption can also indirectly address situations of "unsustainable exploitation of workers," who are denied not only equal access to food, but also other resources, such as safe housing and acceptable working conditions (Two Years 1). By establishing themselves as producers of their own food and giving recognition to both the unpaid and poorly paid labor, farmworkers can pave the way for change in regard to equal access and fair treatment.

We have not yet been able to contact a global partner. However, when we do, we will be able to find out more about their needs and goals as they relate to our own and therefore participate in both shared learning and activism.

By working in solidarity with YAYA, we are supporting activism enacted “to change the oppressive social, political and economic conditions of farmworkers” (“About”). Human rights violations such as those our local farmworkers face are worldwide issues and are experienced in many forms across many communities. While YAYA is “[i]nspired by the principles of nonviolence of the farmworker movement,” we are inspired by the efforts of YAYA and the organization’s slant towards working with, not simply for farmworker communities (“About”). As we work with each other and with YAYA, we will cultivate ethical activism through focusing on our communicative and social interactions.

I personally believe that this should be effective as a service-learning project not only because it will contribute to our community and the communities around us, but it will also bring light to a group of people that may not have been acknowledged before. As Trinh Minh-ha discusses in chapter II of “Woman, Native, Other” we, as anthropologists, attempt to understand, classify, and change a community of people that we do not fully understand. “Omnipresent even in his absence being, he has invaded homes of the wise and left his rottenness in every piece of land he sets foot on.” (Minh-ha, 49) By doing this project we will not bring knowledge to them and try to change their ways, but instead try to change our ways and attitudes towards them. If, after our project, they learn something for us then the most will be accomplished, but bringing knowledge to our community is a main personal goal of mine. Hopefully by bringing out communities together and working as a whole we can better something in the process.


3. The Project Proposal:

Our intention for this project is to forge relationships with farmworker communities on a local to global level, with a focus on women and how their lives are impacted by the work they do. We will accomplish our goals by dividing them up between the various aforementioned committees. We will begin developing a relationship with our local community partner, YAYA, by attending meetings and fulfilling their requested needs for gardening tools and long sleeve shirts. We will also be participating in the Fellsmere Community Garden Event, where we will be gardening and sharing and preparing a meal, while also learning from one another. We will determine the needs of our global partners through email and meet whatever need(s) that they express at that time.



We will complete our service-learning project via our combined resources as individuals, the resources we have available as UCF students, and the resources of our Orlando community. Through the expertise of YAYA and FWAF, we will be able to better understand the ways in which we can use our resources to best serve the needs of the farmworker community. We will be communicating as a group in order to continuously reevaluate our initial methodology, resources, and group organizational structure, in order to best serve our goals.

One of our immediate goals in supporting YAYA and FWAF in the Fellsmere community gardening day is to fundraise one shovel and one rake per student. Another goal is to fundraise the cost per person for our visit, which includes meals and transportation. These goals are feasible because we have access to different types of resources that will help our fundraising efforts, such as on-campus technology to create fundraiser advertisements, as well as access to various campus organizations that may support our fundraising events. Our most important goal is to support our community partner and their sustainable relationship building with farmworker communities. Our fundraising efforts will provide the Fellsmere community with the tools that they currently need and will use in the future. We will also be providing labor within the Fellsmere community garden and helping with the upkeep of the plots, a service that FWAF has asked YAYA and our Global class to provide. Through this project, we hope to help YAYA strengthen their established relationship with the Fellsmere community, and that through our collaborative efforts, we will create a sustainable relationship with our community partner.


Project Timeline:

· February 21: First Group Meeting

· March 15: Third Group Meeting

· March 16-30: Fundraising for YAYA Event

· March 31: Participate in YAYA’s Community Garden Project

8 am Depart Orlando from NFWM office

10 am Arrive To Fellsmere

10:15 am Welcome, introductions and instructions

10:45 am Gardening

1:00 pm Lunch/ short soccer game

2:00 pm Gardening

4:30 pm Debrief

5:15 pm Dinner

6:00 pm Depart Fellsmere

8:00 pm Arrive to Orlando at NFWM Office

Date TBD: Debriefing meeting

Works Cited

"About Service-Learning - UCF Experiential Learning." Experiential Learning. University of Central Florida. Web. 23 Feb. 2012.

Desai, Manisha. "Transnational Solidarity: Women's Agency, Structural Adjustment, and Globalization." Women's Activism and Globalization: Linking Local Struggles and Transnational Politics. By Nancy A. Naples and Manisha Desai. New York: Routledge, 2002. 15-33. Print.

Minh-Ha, Trihn. Woman, Native, Other: Writing Postcoloniality and Feminism. Bloomington [u.a.: Indiana Univ., 1989. Print.

“Two Years After the Events…” La Via Campesina: International Peasant’s Movement. La Via Campesina International Peasant’s Voice. 12 January 2012. Web. 23 February 2012.

"What Is Global Citizenship?" GlobalPACT.org. Global Pact. Web. 23 Feb. 2012.