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Community Organizational Resources

 

Illustration of several differently colored hands overlapping in the center, symbolizing collaboration and unity.

 

Professional Resources

Advancing Social Change through Community Practice

ASOSA is a professional membership organization: Community organizers, activists, nonprofit administrators, community builders, policy practitioners, students, and educators.

 

Blue circular diagram labeled “Principles of Community Organizing” in the center, with surrounding wedges that read Listening, Relationship Building, Challenge, Action, Evaluation, Reflection, and Celebration.

 

Planning Tool Exchange

The Orton Family Foundation hosts The Planning Tool Exchange, a free online database of community projects, activity guides, tools, and resources. With more than 200 listings the site could have easily become unwieldy and overwhelming, however it is actually pleasantly intuitive and easy to navigate due to the design which includes both a general search bar and the ability to filter by keyword, content type, tool type, project scale and more. A few of the resources that caught our eye included a comprehensive guide for community visionings, an asset mapping handbook, and the Why Here Why Now project, which used multimedia interviews to increase collaboration in a polarized town.

Civic Activism Toolkit

The Civic Activism Toolkit is an online directory of 29 innovative tools and approaches for civic activism from around the world. The toolkit was developed by Involve for the Building Change Trust, and includes tools like scenario workshops, participatory card games, and forum theatre.

Campaigners Toolkit

This site hosted by The Change Agency contains a unique collection of more than 1,000 resources for activists and organizers including workshop resources, case studies, web links, blog posts, and articles. To peruse the vast array of resources, you can use the search box, view structured pages on key themes such as ‘strategy’ and ‘working in groups,’ or select from a list of tags for topics and resource types.

Community Tool Box

With over 7,000 pages, the Community Tool Box connects grassroots organizations, nonprofits, and individuals with practical information to assess, plan, evaluate, and sustain their efforts. Under the ‘Learn a Skill’ menu option, you can view step-by-step guidance for more than 300 different community-building skills or browse 16 toolkits, which offer shorter outlines for key tasks like developing a strategic plan or writing a grant. If you need additional guidance, the site also has a troubleshooting guide for common problems in community work, a simple model for taking action, a database of best practices, and free online courses.

Collective Action Toolkit

Developed by Frog Design, the Collective Action Toolkit includes activities arranged into six categories, from building a group, to imagining new ideas, to planning change. The visually pleasing toolkit is intended to enable groups of people anywhere to organize, collaborate, create shared goals, and move beyond discussion to action.

No Kings Toolkit

The No Kings Host Toolkit is a comprehensive guide created to support individuals and groups in organizing peaceful, nonviolent demonstrations to defend democracy and stand against abuses of power. The toolkit includes resources on logistics, safety and security planning, managing media attention, and coordinating event roles. It offers guidance for recruiting volunteers, developing effective messaging, and ensuring accessibility and visibility for events nationwide. Materials such as sample agendas, speaker prep guides, downloadable graphics, and "Know Your Rights" cards are included to help hosts create impactful and safe gatherings focused on promoting civic engagement and community solidarity.