A Decade of New Youth Activism, a Generation of Protectors

December 29, 2009

By Raj Jayadev

This piece appeared in New America Media.  It is re-printed here with the author’s permission.

Around this time last decade, I was wading through clouds of tear gas and dodging rubber bullets from the Seattle Police Department. I was 24, it was the World Trade Organization (WTO) protests and a moment that I thought signaled the inauguration of a new youth activism that would hit the ground running with the new millennium.

I was right about the arrival of a new political engagement of young people for the decade, but wrong in my presumption that it would look and feel like the activist movements in America’s past that I had read about. I thought young people, 16 to 24-year-olds, were going to continue what my generation did — fight for inclusion, to be part of the ongoing struggles over civil rights, immigration and the environment. Instead, they decided to lead them. They did so by redefining what it means to be an ‘activist,’ who could be one, and new ways to get the job done. They made history in the process, and did so on their own terms.

In Seattle, I was part of a “youth of color contingent.” In a mainly older, white anti-globalization movement in the United States, to define and pronounce ourselves was important. Our fight was just to be part of the fight, and that’s exactly what we did. Never before had we known what it felt like to completely take over city blocks, to make global financial powers nervous, or to freeze a major international convening. Read the rest of this entry »


When Cops Attack Online: New Media Can Still Mean Old Politics

June 29, 2009

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By Raj Jayadev

(this article was originally published by New America Media and is re-posted here with the author’s permission)

A few months back, I wrote an article called “Copwatch 2.0”.  It was about the shooting death of Oscar Grant by law enforcement, the fact that the act was shown on YouTube, and how our internet cutlure has changed the landscape of police accountability.

I think the San Jose Police Officers Association just read the title because based on their recent Internet postings, they have their own ideas of what happens to police accountability in a hyper-communications era.  They feel that if activists are using new media to expose what they feel is police abuse – posting videos and blogs of civilians getting tased, beaten, or otherwise mistreated – cops can create their own media as well. Read the rest of this entry »


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