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DESCRIPTION:This is a book talk by Gordon Chin, the founding member of the Chinatown 
 Community Development Center (CCDC) of San Francisco, one of the premiere 
 low-income housing advocacy organizations in the country.  \n\nThe book 
 offers a true history of how Chinatown survived as a low-income 
 neighborhood.  It offers a a firsthand view on how to produce meaningful 
 and positive social change from the grassroots. It is packed with local 
 information, history, people's stories about resistance and improving their 
 lives.\n\nCo-sponsored by Eastwind Books of Berkeley, Oakland Asian 
 Cultural Center, National CAPACD, and the UC Berkeley Asian American and 
 Asian Disapora Studies Program\n\n************\n\nContents of the 
 book:\n\nIntroduction\nPrologue\n\nSection One: Convergence\nThe Asian 
 American and Community Development Movements in San Francisco, 
 1968–1977\n\nChapter 1: Ten Years That Woke Up Chinatown\nChapter 4: 
 Saving Chinese Playground\nChapter 2: Fighting for San Francisco 
 Neighborhoods\nChapter 3: The Fall of the I Hotel\nChapter 4: Saving 
 Chinese Playground\nChapter 5: The Mei Lun Yuen Affordable Housing Project 
 55 \nChapter 6: Those Chinese Bus Drivers\n\nSection Two: 
 Preservation\nFighting for Chinatown’s Land and People, History and 
 Identity, 1977–1987\n\nChapter 7: Starting an Organization\nChapter 8: 
 Becoming Housing Developers 103 Chapter 9: The Ping Yuen Rent 
 Strike\nChapter 10: Saving Residential Hotels\nChapter 11: Chinatown 
 Alleyways\nChapter 12: Chinatown Land Use Wars 141 Chapter 13: Rezoning 
 Chinatown\n\nSection Three: Revitalization Planning for Chinatown and Its 
 Place in San Francisco, 1988–1999\n\nChapter 14: The Loma Prieta 
 Earthquake\nChapter 15: Transportation Aftershocks\nChapter 16: Preserving 
 Housing, Preserving Neighborhoods 193 Chapter 17: The Broadway 
 Corridor\nChapter 18: Building Community, Chinatown Style\n\nSection Four: 
 Transitions\nTo New Visions and New Leadership for Chinatown, 
 2000–2012\n\nChapter 19: The Rise of the I Hotel\nChapter 20: The 
 International Hotel Block\nChapter 21: The Central Subway\nChapter 22: The 
 New Era of Affordable Housing in San Francisco\nChapter 23: Who Can Afford 
 to Live in San Francisco?\n\nSection Five: Movements\nPolitics and 
 Leadership, Chinatowns and the Asian American Movement\n\nChapter 24: From 
 Community Leadership to Political Leadership\nChapter 25: Chinatown 
 USA\nChapter 26: The National Asian American Community Development 
 Movement\nChapter 27: You Can Never Have Enough Leadership … or Hawaiian 
 Shirts\n\nEpilogue\n\n\n*************\n\nReviews of the Book\n\nBuilding 
 Community is an intellectual tour de force by one of California’s most 
 influential organizers, activists, and urban innovators. Gordon Chin was 
 not merely present at many of the critical junctures that created the 
 modern Bay Area, his skillful political organizing and community-building 
 work shaped the history of the region from the student strikes through 
 contemporary efforts to empower and mobilize residents of Chinatown. The 
 book is part socio-political history, part community development primer, 
 part how-to guide for community organizers, and part autobiography. And he 
 writes as he has worked throughout his career – with a clarity of purpose 
 but in the spirit of collaboration and community, giving due credit to 
 other individuals and institutions. Though rich with powerful stories, 
 Building Community is much more than a retelling of history, it is a 
 thoughtfully integrated and conceptually rich narrative suitable for 
 academic courses in urban studies, history, political science, ethnic 
 studies, leadership studies, and other disciplines as well as an imminently 
 readable chronicle of San Francisco history. For scholars, this book 
 provides a treasure of first-hand accounts and thick descriptions that will 
 provide the basis for future research.\n–Corey Cook, Associate Professor 
 of Politics, University of San Francisco\n\nCommunity activist, housing 
 developer, policy and land use guru, commissioner and collaborative 
 leader… this is what Gordon Chin has meant to our City and the Chinese 
 and Asian communities he has served and advocated for. He has a lot to say 
 about our City’s history for the past 55 plus years and I am grateful he 
 has put into words for all of us to appreciate.\n–San Francisco Mayor Ed 
 Lee\n\nGordon Chin is one of those movers and shakers who has made San 
 Francisco worth living in. His fight to keep the city’s legendary 
 Chinatown a vibrant and affordable community is a model for righteous 
 activism. Now we need a new generation of bravehearts, young men and women 
 willing to fight to save wonderfully multidimensional cities like San 
 Francisco so they don’t become a jeweled preserve of the one percent. 
 “Building Community, Chinatown Style” is full of crucial lessons for 
 the next generation of urban warriors and dreamers – and for those of us 
 old ones who still haven’t given up. Read and learn… and get 
 inspired.\n–David Talbot, author of the national bestseller, Season of 
 the Witch: Enchantment, Terror and Deliverance in the City of Love\n\nPart 
 memoir, part history, and part political strategy, “Building Community, 
 Chinatown Style” is a “must read” for anyone interested in learning 
 more about how Gordon Chin and the Chinatown Community Development Center 
 successfully dealt with issues of affordable housing, transportation and 
 public space, making San Francisco Chinatown a better place to 
 live.\n–Judy Yung, Professor Emeritus of American Studies, UC Santa Cruz 
 and co author of Island: Poetry and History of Chinese Immigrants on Angel 
 Island, 1910-1940.\n\nMore than the history of an agency, the book is a 
 tribute to the vitality and spirit that is Chinatown and those who created 
 its triumphs and met the challenges of historic attacks and persistent 
 opposition. It is told with deep insight and refreshing humility from the 
 perspective and experiences of co founder and former director of the 
 Chinatown Community Development Center, Gordon Chin, whose response to the 
 seminal moment of the Third World Student Strike at SF State in 1968 to 69 
 was a four decades commitment to the community that gave him birth. 
 Strengthened and inspired by young student activists, 90 year old tenant 
 organizers, bus drivers, community agency workers and organizers, behind 
 the scene teachers, up front preachers, and political leaders, Gordon 
 honors them all.\n\nIt might be said that the insights and experiences he 
 shares and the way he organizes them into clear and focused strategies and 
 tactics, makes him a Saul Alinsky for the 21st century. But that would not 
 capture the essence of it. Gordon goes deeper than theory.\n\nThis is a 
 personal account of his and his mentors and peers organic and personal 
 connection to a place, their place.  It is the DNA of 
 community.\n\nDedicated to his parents, this book is a 288 page love 
 letter.\n\nRead it, laugh with it, cry with it, and then get up, and come 
 home.\n–John Wichman, Chinatown native and writer\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2015/08/25/18776619.php
SUMMARY:Gordon Chin Book Talk: Building Community, Chinatown Style: A Half Century of Leadership
LOCATION:Eastwind Books of Berkeley\n2066 University Avenue (near 
 Shattuck)\nBerkeley, CA 94704
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2015/08/25/18776619.php
DTSTART:20150919T220000Z
DTEND:20150919T233000Z
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