July 1, 2026
Understanding & Measuring Power
Who Are Your People? Civic Leadership and the Sources of Power
Description
This report highlights civic leaders who have built a base of followers and, acting collectively, wield power in public decision-making. We aim to re-energize the traditions of civic leadership and organizing that are vital to building a democracy that reflects the voice and interests of all people.
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Tameka Greer, Natalie Patrick-Knox, and Elnora Gavin

Our democracy is rooted in our norms, laws, and institutions: free and fair elections, representative government, adherence to the rule of law, the guarantee of individual civil rights and liberties. But in a genuine democracy, everyday people – not a narrow, minority of elites or wealthy individuals and institutions – drive government decisions. How? Everyday people acting individually rarely have the capacity to make government responsive to their interests. They need to organize with others to build collective power and take action together to assert their interests effectively in public life. Civic leaders are people who take responsibility for organizing others to discern and act on their collective interests. Leaders build a base of followers who, when they act strategically and cohesively, have the power to influence political and economic decisions, to shape laws and their application and the behaviors and actions of private sector institutions.

Related Research

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October 22, 2025
Civic Power: The Role and Impact of Independent Political Organizations
This memo summarizes the toplines from several quantitative and qualitative research projects undertaken in 2025 to evaluate the political and power implications of base-building organizing.
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April 28, 2025
Building Civic Homes: Fostering Belonging, Agency, and Collective Impact
Over the course of two years, Sojourn Strategies conducted two phases of research to better understand what brings individuals into organizations and what sustains connection to the organizations.