Forced evictions on stolen land during a global pandemic? That’s a reality facing nearly 30-40 million people in the U.S. who can’t pay their rent. Forced evictions have been happening on these lands since colonizers first arrived, terrorizing and displacing Indigenous communities. Today’s eviction crisis is only the latest in generations of compounding crises of violence. The fatally inadequate state support in the midst of the massive economic fallout of COVID-19 is nothing new. 

A housing crisis existed long before COVID-19 began. In January of 2019, nearly 570,000 people were experiencing homelessness in the U.S. This number says nothing for the uncounted, the unknown, the erased– let alone those struggling to stay in homes they cannot afford or those living under abusive landlords. The racial inequities of this issue mirror (and reproduce) those of other human rights issues: BIPOC are disproportionately represented among the unhoused population, with Black and indigenous people facing the highest rates among these groups. This is the result of generations of discrimination in housing, criminal punishment, child welfare, education, and employment, as well as the tolls of gentrification, dispossession, and displacement. These systemic stressors also cause or exacerbate mental illness. About a third of unhoused people in the U.S. have serious mental illness, leaving them vulnerable to further state violence like police killings. 

The pandemic and accompanying recession have been fuel for a long-burning fire. Structural racism threatens to become even more entrenched as Black and Latinx communities bear the brunt of the most severe impacts of COVID-19 on income, employment, and wellbeing. 

So– what can we do?

The history of resistance to forced evictions stretches across the globe and far back in time. Stopping evictions is an act of “collective empowerment” in which groups in the U.S draw from tactics used in the Great Depression or even from demonstration techniques systematically employed in Spain

Some ways groups are resisting include: 

And today, many of us have phones that give us a new tool to fight back: video documentation. 

Filming before, during, and/or after an eviction can help bring attention to an individual case or group of cases. It can also be used to help mobilize a larger movement against forced evictions.  Video can be used as a tool in campaigns that call the state to account for the ongoing neglect of human life. The same footage can be used to call attention to the entrenched racism of policies, illuminate the strengths of a society that must be protected, and amplify grassroots solutions to problems that have devastated communities for centuries. For example, community-led police accountability groups like Berkeley Copwatch have been collecting videos of raids on homeless encampments and police abuse against unhoused individuals to raise public awareness and hold officers accountable

Someone holding a protest sign that says "Housing Justice is Racial Justice"
Picture credit: LA Times

In collaboration with affected communities, WITNESS and Amnesty International created guides, tip sheets, and videos that outline how to safely and effectively use film to fight forced evictions. This Forced Evictions Advocacy Toolkit is available for download in English, Spanish, French, Arabic, Portuguese, Hindi, Italian, Khmer, Oriya, and Romanian.  You can find inspiration by reading our highlights on how activists in countries like Kenya, Cambodia, India, Colombia, and Brazil have leveraged these resources in the past: here and here

You can also pull from our social media toolkit on documenting forced evictions to ensure that this information gets shared in your networks and can reach those who need this information the most. 

Two people with a protest banner that says "Stop Mass Evictions + Foreclosures"
Picture credit: NBC Boston

Solidarity is essential to the survival of many and for the liberation of us all. And safe housing should be a human right.  While COVID-19 and capitalism ravage on, our recovery will rely on each of us equipping ourselves with skills to protect our community members. Be sure to follow, amplify, and support community groups that are working to end the abuses tied into evictions and houselessness. Look for local organizations and tenant unions organizing rent strikes, mutual aid efforts, and advocacy campaigns. 

Our collective liberation is the way home. 

 

GROUPS TO FOLLOW + SUPPORT 

Eviction Lab

Shelterforce

Anti-Eviction Map (NY, CA) 

Alliance for Housing Justice  

Right to the City Alliance

Make the Road (NY + other states)

Legal Aid Society (NYC)

DSA Housing Justice (NY)

Met Council on Housing (NYC) 

Right To Counsel (NYC) 

Eviction Defense Collaborative (CA) 

Street Watch LA (CA)

Moms 4 Housing (CA)

Action NC  (NC) 

Seattle Kings County Homeless Coalition (WA)

Find local organizations in your area by using Just Shelter’s mapping tool

 

KEY WITNESS RESOURCES 

 

Guide to Filming Forced Evictions: 

Download English guide: wit.to/ForcedEvictions 

Download Arabic guide: wit.to/ForcedEvictions-AR

Download Portuguese guide: wit.to/RemocoesForcadas

Download Spanish guide: wit.to/DesalojosForzosos

More languages here  

 

Tip sheets for Filming Forced Evictions:  

Download English: wit.to/ForcedEvictions-Tips

 

Know Your Rights: Forced Evictions (WITNESS + Amnesty International): Download English guide: wit.to/ForcedEvictions-Rights

Download Spanish guide: wit.to/TomaPartido-DF

More languages available here

 

Know Your Obligations: Forced Evictions (WITNESS + Amnesty International) Download English guide: wit.to/ForcedEvictions-Obligations

Download Spanish guide: wit.to/ConozcanSusObligaciones-DF

More languages available here

Films on Forced Evictions 

People Before Profit (Youtube with subtitles in multiple languages)

People Before Profit (Download in additional languages here)

 

ADDITIONAL RESOURCES 

Anthology Film Archives + Shelter Force: Films on housing rights, displacement and the meaning of home

 

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