How Mass Movements Drive Policy Change
May 10, 2024
Policymakers can’t act alone. Movements help guide the way to change.
The Roosevelt Rundown features our top stories of the week.
The Power of Inside-Outside Strategy
Policy change doesn’t happen without movements. At the start of the last decade, Occupy Wall Street activists forced the world to confront the failures of neoliberalism and demanded a more democratic economy. “Over the following 10 years,” Roosevelt wrote last year, “academic theorists and policy researchers joined grassroots activists in beginning to articulate how to do exactly that.”
Making change takes thinkers and doers. This week, Roosevelt President and CEO Felicia Wong joined Deepak Bhargava, coauthor of Roosevelt’s recent Cultural Contradictions report, on his and Stephanie Luce’s Practical Radicals podcast to discuss inside-outside strategy—the way that movements can make effective change by engaging with policymakers.
“[The movement space] sets huge goals, it inspires us, it is imaginative,” said Wong. Occupy Wall Street, the Green New Deal network, Fight for 15, and the care work coalition are just some of the groups and campaigns that forced the arrival of the post-neoliberal era. It was their hard work that helped policymakers realize what was possible. After years of effort, progressive thinkers joined the ranks of the Biden administration, and legislators introduced proposals like Build Back Better—which, although it ultimately fell short of its original expansive scope, led to the Inflation Reduction Act, the largest piece of climate legislation to date.
In the episode, Wong and Bhargava discuss the coordination between movements and policymakers, and the importance of policy feedback loops—ensuring that the policies that are passed help strengthen coalitions and set the scene for future political change.
“You need the change in thinking. . . . But you can’t think in isolation,” Wong said. “You actually have to think—and act—in conjunction with movements . . . You have to understand: What is it that animates people?”
Join the Roosevelt Institute Team
The Roosevelt Institute is looking for experts to join us in imagining a more democratic economy. If you—or someone in your network—are interested in joining our community of thinkers and advocates, check out our latest career opportunities:
- Principal Economist
- Director, Macroeconomic Analysis
- Director, Stratification Economics
- Director, Race and Democracy
What We’re Talking About
Policymakers are responsible for setting the rules for banks to protect consumers and ensure financial stability.
Making it easier for banks across the board to hold crypto would undermine the SEC's ability to regulate the inherently volatile asset. https://t.co/d8y53GK1wN
— Roosevelt Institute (@rooseveltinst) May 9, 2024
What We’re Reading
Neoliberal Economics: The Road to Freedom or Authoritarianism? – feat. Roosevelt Chief Economist Joseph Stiglitz – Planet Money
A Plan to Help Harlem Students Build Wealth: Start Them Off with $10,000 – feat Roosevelt Senior Fellow Darrick Hamilton – New York Times
The US Will Triple Its Chip Manufacturing in Less than a Decade, Report Says – Quartz
‘We Deserve More’: US Workers’ Share of the Pie Dwindles – The Guardian