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A large, colorful mural painted on the exterior of a building. It says "WELCOME TO NOHO" in capital letters and depicts people of different ages, genders, races, and ethnicities dancing and playing music in front of different types of housing and community buildings, including apartment buildings, a health and fitness center, a theater, and a gallery. The building is set back from a public sidewalk, and part of a tree shades the right-hand side of the mural.
From the Field

How State Coalitions Are Advancing Community Ownership of Housing

In recent years, housing coalitions promoting community land trusts and real estate cooperatives have formed in multiple cities and states—and they are achieving results. Nonetheless, a lot of work is needed to achieve the policy changes these groups desire.

A webinar screenshot of three people. In the top-left corner is a white man with gray hair and dark eyebrows; he is wearing headphones, glasses, and a checkered shirt, and his background is blurred. In the top-right corner is a Hawaiian woman with dark hair; she is wearing glasses and a black t-shirt, and she is set against a screensaver of a tree-lined field. On the bottom is a white woman with brown hair; she is wearing a green floral top and large earrings, and she is set against a screensaver background of the earth viewed from space.
Housing

What Does a Solidarity Approach to Housing Look Like? A Shelterforce Webinar

In this webinar, we examine what a solidarity economy approach is, what its principles are, how these principles are being applied presently, and how they might be applied more broadly to support housing justice and transformative economic change.

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State & Local Policy

Could Massachusetts Get Rent Control Back After a 32-Year Ban?

In Massachusetts, the collection of more than 124,000 signatures makes it likely that a statewide rent control measure will be on the ballot in November.

A large group of people of different races, ages, and genders, standing on a large marble staircase in a state capitol building. At the bottom of the staircase are two signs, one of which reads "Georgia Healthy Housing Coalition: Every Georgian deserves a healthy home."
From the Field

Advocates in the South Get Organized to Advance Tenants Rights

In states across the South, coalitions that include housing justice advocates, tenant leaders, and legal service providers are coming together to oppose anti-tenant policies and advance tenant rights.

The exteriors of three colorful cooperative housing units. The units are connected via their rooflines, and each one has an upper balcony. A shared sidewalk and small plantings can be seen in the foreground.
Solidarity Corner

In Eugene, Housing Advocates Call for a Tenant Right to Purchase Act

Housing advocates in Eugene, Oregon, are seeking to create a legislative framework that would allow tenants to collectively acquire multifamily buildings when a building comes up for sale.

Two young white adults stand outside and hold up a large paper-mache head with dollar signs for eyes and a hand holding a golden key. One of them wears a red t-shirt that says All-Chicago Tenant Alliance.
Tenant Organizing

How a Landlord Tried to Silence Tenants and Stop a Shelterforce Story

When Chicago tenants on rent strike agreed to stop speaking publicly about their landlord as part of settling their eviction cases, they honored the agreement. They never dreamed the landlord’s lawyers would try to charge them with violating the agreement for having talked to us in the past.

A group of Black men, including Rev. Jesse Jackson, at a protest. Some of the men hold signs with a rainbow graphic that read "Save our homes! Rainbow Push Coalition," in capital letters.
From the Field

From Protest to Power: Housing, Capital, and Rev. Jackson’s Unfinished Agenda

Rev. Jesse Jackson’s passing reminds us of the need to combine political and economic organizing—and to translate protest gains into lasting structural change.

A group of people—mainly women and children—hold signs with Portuguese writing. Some of the signs say "Termo Territorial Coletivo."
From the Field

In Brazil, Organized Favelas Turn to CLTs to Protect Their Land

In Brazil’s settlements, or favelas, residents risk displacement due to unclear property title—but getting clear title could price them out of the community. Could community land trusts offer a solution to this dilemma?

Busy scene of striking tenants, of mixed ages and skin tones, most holding signs. Signs say "Stop landlord greed/Unionize" and "Every tenant deserves a union" and "Not one cent for the slumlords." Others are round "universal no" signs showing rodents, broken staircases, flooded bathrooms.
Tenant Organizing

Rent Strikes, Targeting Tax Breaks, and Data: Tenant Organizing Beyond Legislative Campaigns

In a time of both federal and state legislature intransigence, tenant organizing strategies that emphasize building-level organizing and other creative approaches are gaining ground.

Six white, mostly young, people sitting in chairs around a round coffee table. One person has a laptop on their lap, and another is on their phone. They appear to be holding a meeting.
Tenant Organizing

They Lost Their Homes, But Built a Movement

Members of the Belden Sawyer Tenant Association were unable to stop their homes from being converted into luxury apartments. But they’ve remained united, opening membership to the whole city and fighting to give tenants the right to purchase their homes.

A group of older women stand on a sidewalk next to a busy street in Minneapolis. The women hold protest signs that say things like "The wrong ICE is melting," "ICE out of USA," and "Immigrants welcome MPLS."
Organizing

Terrorized by ICE, Unable to Pay Rent, Minnesotans Are Getting Ready for a Rent Strike

A tenant organizing push in the Twin Cities has support from labor unions representing more than 25,000 workers.

A photo of a woman staring to the right. She has dark hair. Above her head are words that read, "Women of color on the Front Lines."
Organizing

From DACA Advocate to Leading Organizer: Erika Castro

Community organizer Erika Castro has turned the barriers she faced early in life into a pathway for leadership and immigration rights advocacy. This video is part of Shelterforce’s Women of Color on the Front Lines series.