Join Local Organizations
Organized people are more powerful than isolated individuals. Find your community and multiply your impact.
The Power of Organization
Types of Organizations
Civic & Voter Organizations
Focus on voting rights, election protection, and civic participation.
- • League of Women Voters — Local chapters nationwide
- • Vote.org — Voter registration and education
- • Common Cause — State chapters focused on democracy reform
Civil Liberties Organizations
Defend constitutional rights through legal action, advocacy, and education.
- • ACLU — State affiliates with local volunteer opportunities
- • National Lawyers Guild — Legal observer training and support
- • Southern Poverty Law Center — Civil rights and hate group monitoring
Community Organizing Groups
Build local power through grassroots organizing on various issues.
- • Indivisible — Local groups focused on congressional accountability
- • DSA — Democratic Socialists of America local chapters
- • Faith-based organizing (PICO, IAF, Gamaliel networks)
Mutual Aid Networks
Neighbors helping neighbors with direct support and community care.
- • Mutual Aid Hub — Find groups in your area
- • Big Door Brigade — Resources for mutual aid organizing
- • Search "[your city] mutual aid" for local networks
Issue-Specific Organizations
Organizations focused on specific causes often have local chapters.
- • Immigration: United We Dream, local sanctuary networks
- • Environment: Sierra Club, 350.org local chapters
- • Labor: Local unions and worker centers
- • Racial justice: Local NAACP chapters, BLM chapters
How to Find Local Groups
Search Online
Search "[your city] + [issue]" or "[your city] civic engagement." Check Facebook groups, Meetup, and NextDoor for local organizing.
Ask Around
Talk to friends, neighbors, and colleagues. Ask at your place of worship, union, or community center. Word of mouth is often the best way to find active groups.
Attend Public Events
Go to town halls, protests, or community meetings. Talk to organizers and ask how to get involved. Bring business cards or a way to exchange contact info.
Start Your Own
If nothing exists in your area, consider starting something. Even a small group of committed people can make a difference. Organizations like Indivisible provide toolkits for starting local chapters.
Getting the Most Out of Involvement
Tips for New Members:
- • Show up consistently (reliability matters)
- • Start by listening and learning
- • Volunteer for specific tasks
- • Build relationships, not just attend meetings
- • Be patient — change takes time
- • Bring your skills, whatever they are
What to Look For:
- • Clear goals and theory of change
- • Democratic decision-making
- • Training and development opportunities
- • Welcoming to newcomers
- • Track record of wins (even small ones)
- • Attention to member well-being
Resources
- Mobilize — Find volunteer opportunities and events
- VolunteerMatch — Connect with local nonprofits
- Action Network — Tools for grassroots organizing
- Beautiful Trouble — Toolbox for creative activism