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We are Highlander: The Movement School
A Heartbeat for Radical Change
For almost a century, Highlander has been the training ground for emerging and established movement leaders across the South, Appalachia, and beyond, shaping a more just and sustainable future. From the labor movements of the 1930s and 40s to the Civil Rights Movement of the 50s and 60s, and into today’s struggles, our workshops and programs bring people together across issues, identities, and geographies to share and build the skills, knowledge, and strategies needed for transformative social change.[]>
Since 1932,
Highlander has centered the experiences of directly-impacted people in our region, knowing that together, we have the solutions to address the challenges we face in our communities and to build more just, equitable, and sustainable systems and structures.[]>
The Compass for The Movement
This work has created strong movement infrastructure in the South and Appalachia, building networks and organizing efforts that advanced the labor movements of the 1930s and 40s, the Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s and 60s, and environmental, economic, and racial justice organizing across decades.[]>
Today,
Today, this work is fortifying movements for the 21st century in powerful ways. We’re building the leadership of youth, LGBTQ+, and Black and Brown organizers while advancing solidarity economies to dismantle capitalism and extractive industries in our region.[]>
Shifting Power, Shaping the Future
Through fiscal sponsorships and hands-on support for groups like the Movement for Black Lives and the Southern Movement Assembly, we’re creating capacity for movement organizations. We’re ensuring that Southern freedom fighters not only have a seat at the table, but are leading efforts to shift systems of oppression and exploitation globally.[]>
Programming & Workshops
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Introducing “On the Hill” Video Shorts
“On the Hill” is our series of igniting conversations with organizers across the U.S. From mushroom inoculation with Chef Chris Roberson to discourse around the state of Black Tennessee — listen in on these bite-size instructionals to learn about everything under the sun, and on the Hill.
Watch Here -
Seeds of Fire
Here, we hold space for intergenerational organizing. With a focus on the power of youth-led organizing, Seeds of Fire provides on-the-ground support, as well as guidance, mentorship, political education, and skill-based training to the rising activists of today.
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Training the Trainers
Our multi-day collaborative workshop brings together 170 pivotal cultural organizers to re-up strategies & strengthen frameworks that they can bring back to their communities.
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Septima Clark Learning Center
The home of Highlander’s library and archive, with collections and programming that weave together the layered history of Southern liberation, through movement memory work.
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Economics and Governance
Our multi-pronged programming to support democracy, which includes anti-fascist training, civics education, protections for organizers during the elections, and support for justice partners in North Carolina and Tennessee.
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Greensboro Justice Fund Fellowship
A fund originally created in 2011 to honor the work of the five organizers killed by members of the Ku Klux Klan and Nazis in Greensboro, 1979.
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Children’s Justice Camp
Our camp offers a week-long, in-person session for youth ages 6-12. Here, at the historic Highland Center in the Great Smoky Mountains, young people mentor one another’s leadership, with transformative experiences in community, collaboration, and confidence-building that will last a lifetime.
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Electoral Justice
Highlander’s Electoral Justice programming, led by Denzel Caldwell, is supporting communities across the U.S. and global South in defending and protecting democracy this year.
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Highlander lives in the past, present, and future every day.
– Co-Executive Director Allyn Maxfield-Steele
The Long Journey To Power
On the journey to a better future, the narrative can get hung up on moments, rather than movements. These moments are exciting: think Dr. King’s speech on Washington, the Stonewall riots — but then they are over. Outside of the greater fabric of ongoing organizing, these electric moments might fizzle out, failing to turn the tide. Highlander is that fabric, connecting the dots between where we’ve been and where we’re going, to create a sustained path forward.
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1898 – 1987 | Septima Clark | Educator & Civil Rights Activist | Mother of the Movement -
Anne Braden and Ella Baker leave the Highlander Folk School Library -
June 1960 | Ella Baker and others at Highlander. -
1957 | Martin Luther King JR. | Minister and Activist | Attended Highlander -
1956 | Rosa Parks, Septima Clark and Leona McCauley -
Rosa Parks with the Clinton 12 at Highlander -
Thurgood Marshall, Anne Braden, Myles Horton, and Septima Clark, during a Civil Rights meeting at Highlander. -
Martin Luther King Jr. at Highlander -
Students dancing at Highlander
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