From 728b73dfcd9f15bfe9b943f796291d40ff0a5c69 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Tomislav Medak Date: Thu, 12 Mar 2020 17:29:02 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Update 'content/session/inventoryoftools.md' --- content/session/inventoryoftools.md | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/content/session/inventoryoftools.md b/content/session/inventoryoftools.md index 646f438..ff205f0 100644 --- a/content/session/inventoryoftools.md +++ b/content/session/inventoryoftools.md @@ -58,7 +58,7 @@ Accountability is an ever-elusive principle that we constantly aspire to develop - A collection of writings on disillusionment with the concept of accountability as it's expressed, expected, and practiced in radical scenes. This can be a difficult piece and I include it here not because I agree with all its contents or approaches, but because it's important to get at the visceral disappointment and rage that many feel over the failure of "accountability" as it's typically been implemented. - > The typical proposal for responding to rape, the community accountability process, is based on a transparent lie. There are no activist communities, only the desire for communities, or the convenient fiction of communities. A community is a material web that binds people together, for better and for worse, in interdependence. If its members move away every couple years because the next place seems cooler, it is not a community. If it is easier to kick someone out than to go through a difficult series of conversations with them, it is not a community. Among the societies that had real communities, exile was the most extreme sanction possible, tantamount to killing them. On many levels, losing the community and all the relationships it involved was the same as dying. Let’s not kid ourselves: we don’t have communities. -## Accountability as a hard reduction +## Accountability as a harm reduction - **Accountability as harm reduction***: removed from a model that implicitly positions accountability as punishment, we can start to see it as the building material of interpersonal relationships, of care and affinity towards those we exist in community with (however we define that). The task of addressing harm is never easy, but perhaps when we're approaching it from a foundation of practicing accountability as care for one another, it can be less devastating. - "The Secret Joy of Accountability: Self-accountability as a Building Block for Change" by Shannon Perez-Darby, from *The Revolution Starts At Home*