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Community Defense Model

Community defense is more than rapid response—it’s a philosophy of how communities protect and support each other.

Community defense means communities taking collective responsibility for protecting their members, especially those most vulnerable to harm.

It’s not about replacing law enforcement—it’s about recognizing that some community members cannot rely on law enforcement for protection, and in fact may be targeted by it.

1. Community-led

  • Those most affected lead the work
  • Decisions are made by the community
  • Outside organizations support, not lead

2. Solidarity, not charity

  • We’re all in this together
  • Supporting each other is mutual
  • No saviors, just neighbors

3. Collective power

  • Individuals are vulnerable
  • Communities are powerful
  • We’re stronger together

4. Harm reduction

  • We can’t prevent all harm
  • We can reduce harm when possible
  • We support those who are harmed

Community defense operates in layers:

Layer 1: Prevention

  • Know Your Rights education
  • Family emergency planning
  • Legal resources ready
  • Community awareness

Layer 2: Early Warning

  • Patrol and monitoring
  • Community reporting
  • Information sharing
  • Alert systems

Layer 3: Active Response

  • Verification and broadcast
  • Documentation
  • Legal observation
  • Family support

Layer 4: Aftermath Support

  • Legal connection
  • Family assistance
  • Community healing
  • Learning and improving

Everyone can participate:

  • Broadcast recipients stay informed
  • Reporters share what they see
  • Patrol members monitor regularly
  • Verifiers confirm information
  • Responders document and support
  • Admins coordinate
  • Supporters provide resources

No role is more important than another. The grandmother who stays inside and calls her neighbor is as important as the verifier in the field.

Community defense is a form of mutual aid:

  • People helping people
  • Horizontal, not hierarchical
  • Based on solidarity
  • Meeting real needs

Community defense can incorporate:

  • Alternatives to calling police
  • Accountability processes
  • Healing approaches
  • Addressing root causes

Community defense is one tactic within a broader movement:

  • Policy advocacy
  • Legal challenges
  • Electoral work
  • Direct action
  • Community organizing

All these approaches work together.

In your neighborhood:

  • Know your neighbors
  • Build relationships
  • Share resources
  • Look out for each other

In your networks:

  • Talk about these issues
  • Share information
  • Build trust
  • Identify how you can help

Connect to existing efforts:

  • Immigrant rights organizations
  • Mutual aid networks
  • Religious communities
  • Labor organizations

Fill gaps:

  • What isn’t being done?
  • Who isn’t being reached?
  • What resources are missing?

Communication:

  • How do people share information?
  • How do alerts go out?
  • Who coordinates?

Resources:

  • Legal support
  • Financial resources
  • Physical supplies
  • Human capacity

Training:

  • Know Your Rights
  • Rapid response protocols
  • Role-specific skills
  • Ongoing education

The people most at risk should be:

  • Consulted in decisions
  • Centered in solutions
  • Respected as experts
  • Supported in leadership

Community defense is not about:

  • Individual heroes
  • Saviors coming to help
  • Outsiders knowing best
  • Recognition or glory

Community defense is about:

  • Collective effort
  • Mutual support
  • Solidarity
  • Shared power

Protecting information protects people:

  • Share only what’s needed
  • Protect identities
  • Use secure communication
  • Think before posting

This work requires:

  • Self-care
  • Community care
  • Realistic expectations
  • Long-term thinking

Tension: The need is urgent, but we can’t burn out.

Balance: Build systems that can respond urgently while maintaining sustainability.

Tension: Security practices can make participation harder.

Balance: Appropriate security for each context, with clear paths for involvement.

Tension: We need to act now, but we also need to plan.

Balance: Start acting while continuing to develop, iterate as you learn.

Tension: Local focus matters, but connections provide resources.

Balance: Root in local community while connecting to broader movements.

  1. Build relationships first - Trust takes time
  2. Start with what’s needed - Listen to community
  3. Add capacity gradually - Don’t overcommit
  4. Learn continuously - Adapt as you go
  • Share learnings with other networks
  • Adapt what works elsewhere
  • Contribute to the broader movement
  • Build regional and national connections

Community defense is part of a larger vision:

  • Communities that care for all their members
  • Systems that support human dignity
  • Justice for all people
  • A world where this work isn’t necessary
  • Know your neighbors
  • Share information
  • Support those in need
  • Build trust
  • Respond with what you have
  • Coordinate with others
  • Document and support
  • Care for each other
  • Remember why we do this
  • Stay connected to purpose
  • Take care of yourself and others
  • Keep going
  • Protect RP (Chicago) - Neighborhood defense model
  • NYSLYC ICE Watch - Statewide rapid response
  • States at the Core (STAC) - Training and coordination
  • United We Dream - National immigrant youth network
  • “Community Defense” resources from immigrant rights organizations
  • Mutual aid organizing guides
  • Transformative justice frameworks
  • Movement history and theory
  • Local immigrant rights organizations
  • National training programs
  • Legal observer trainings
  • Know Your Rights facilitation training

Community defense is not just what we do—it’s how we relate to each other and our shared humanity. We protect each other because we’re connected. We’re stronger together.