Your College Is Probably Evil. Here’s How to Pressure It Into Doing Better
Schools are doing annoying, tragic, discriminatory stuff all the time. If you don’t like it, there are ways to get them to listen.
Parks Carried the Pandemic Year on Their Backs. Here’s How to Thank Them
Look out for volunteer opportunities, show love on social media, and show up to town halls to sing the praises of public green space.
How to Understand—and Fight—the Mental Health Care Crisis in the U.S.
Whether you're trying to navigate the system yourself or help improve it for everyone, it's important to know what you're up against.
A Beginner's Guide to Abolishing ICE
ICE is relatively new; only barely older than the movement to get rid of it.
How to Find and Join an Organization Pushing for the Causes You Care About
Attending protests and reading anti-racism books are great first steps, but real power comes from working with other people to make change.
Voter Information on Judges Is Impossible to Find. Here’s How We Change That
It can be nearly impossible for voters to make informed decisions on increasingly important judicial races. But that’s (slowly) starting to shift.
How to Radicalize Your Parents
If you’re hoping your relatives will embrace frameworks like prison abolition and anti-capitalism, start small, be patient, and set boundaries.
A Beginner's Guide to How the U.S. Prison System Actually Works
If you’re fairly new to this topic, it can feel overwhelming—so here are some podcasts, books, and documentaries to start with.
How to Have a Career in Policy—Without Being a Politician
Regardless of your interests, background, or schooling, there are plenty of ways to make improving life in the U.S. your job.
How To Run for Office, Even if You're Not a 'Traditional' Candidate
If you've taken nudes, smoked weed, or otherwise been a human being: Your "past" can actually be an asset to your candidacy.
How to Find and Bug the Correct Local Politician to Actually Get Stuff Done
If you want to make life better in your community, look to your city councilmembers, state reps, and school board. Here's a guide to what they do.