Patrick Reinsborough (born 1972) is an American writer, activist, social change theorist and practitioner. He is the co-author of Re:Imagining Change: How to Use Story-based Strategy to Win Campaigns, Build Movements and Change the World (
PM Press, 2010/2017) and contributor to social movement anthologies including Globalize Liberation: How to Uproot the System and Build a Better World (
City Lights, 2004) and Beautiful Trouble: A Toolbox for Revolution (
OR Books, 2012).
Original 2003 cover of Decolonizing the Revolutionary Imagination zine. It was released under “anti-copyright” and widely republished including in the anthology Globalize Liberation.[1] The essay has been referenced in various pop culture depictions of the era including Jenny Fran Davis’s novel Everything Must Go.[2]
Narrative strategy
Reinsborough's writing and political work deals with building transformative movements, shifting cultural narratives[3] and political imagination[4] with a focus on the ecological crisis.[5][6] He authored the widely circulated essay/zine "Decolonizing the Revolutionary Imagination".[7][8][1] He was a founding member of the smartMeme Strategy & Training Project,[9] which began in 2002 training grassroots activists to apply
meme theory[10][11] as a way to shift political debates, amplify social change efforts and "change the story".[12] Reinsborough is one of the creators of story-based strategy methodology[13][14] and associated with widely used social change frameworks such as "narrative power analysis",[15][16] "points of intervention"[17][18] and the "battle of the story".[19][20] He co-founded and was the executive director of the Center for Story-based Strategy.[21][22]
He has been a public voice against U.S. militarism and called for the American public to engage in mass nonviolent disruption to stop wars.[28] He was an anti-war organizer and media strategist working with the San Francisco-based mobilization
Direct Action to Stop the War,[29] which led mass protests against the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq.[30][31] He has publicly supported Iraq Veterans Against the War[32] and also advocated for making connections between opposing war and other issues such as racial and economic justice, corporate power and the climate crisis.[33][34]
Environment, climate and Indigenous rights
Reinsborough has been associated with a number of campaigns challenging the human rights and ecological impacts of
fossil fuels as well as demanding stronger action to
address climate change. He helped organize an international solidarity campaign supporting Colombia’s indigenous
U’wa people, who threatened to commit collective suicide to protest oil drilling on their ancestral territories.[35][36][37][38] Reinsborough has repeatedly cited Mexico’s indigenous
Zapatista movement as an inspiration for his thinking and political work.[39][40][41]
He has supported protests inside the
United Nations COP Climate Talks that criticize the failure of the process to address the climate crisis[42][43] as well as worked to amplify the voices of North American indigenous leaders participating in the UN forum.[44] Reinsborough is a proponent of
climate justice specifically advocating for the broader
climate movement taking stronger leadership from fossil-fuel impacted communities as a way to accelerate a
just transition to a renewable energy future.[45][46] He has been a strong critic of the
Trump administration, calling them "
neo-fascist" and pawns of “global
petrocapitalism”.[47]
Apocalyptic narratives and COVID
Reinsborough’s work has often addressed apocalyptic narratives, including coining the phrase “slow-motion apocalypse” to describe public response to the global ecological crisis.[48][49][41] During the
COVID pandemic in 2020 he did a series of broadcasts[50] sponsored by
California Institute of Integral Studies about the role of apocalyptic narratives in shaping political discourse around various structural crises revealed by the pandemic.
^
abGlobalize liberation: How to Uproot the System and Build a Better World. Solnit, David. San Francisco, CA: City Lights Books. 2004. pp. 161–212.
ISBN0872864200.
OCLC51060187.{{
cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (
link)
^El Khoury, Ann (2015). Globalization Development and Social Justice: A Propositional political Approach. Routledge.
ISBN9781317504801.
^Knasnabish, Alex (2008). Zapatismo Beyond Borders: New Imaginations of Political Possibility. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. pp. 172–173.
ISBN978-0-8020-9633-3.
^Kaufman, Cynthia (2014). Getting Past Capitalism: History, Vision, Hope. Plymouth UK: Lexington Books. p. 131.
ISBN978-0-7391-9065-4.
^Robé, Chris (2017). Breaking the Spell: A History of Anarchist Filmmakers, Videotape Guerrillas and Digital Ninjas. Oakland: PM Press. p. 19.
ISBN978-1-62963-233-9.
^Robé, Chris (2017). Breaking the Spell: A History of Anarchist Filmmakers, Videotape Guerrillas and Digital Ninjas. Oakland: PM Press. pp. 280–281.
ISBN978-1-62963-233-9.
^Solnit, David (2004). Globalize Liberation: How to Uproot the System and Build a Better World. San Francisco: City Lights Publishers. pp. 4–8.
ISBN0872864200.
^Robé, Chris (2017). Breaking the Spell: A History of Anarchist Filmmakers, Videotape Guerrillas and Digital Ninjas. Oakland: PM Press. pp. 280–291.
ISBN978-1-62963-233-9.