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Description

How do movements shift people from neutrality or even opposition into active allies for justice struggles?

In this episode of the Troublemakers podcast, Monica hosts Sungu Oyoo, a writer, educator, activist, and Pan-Africanist. Sungu works with MWAMKO (Pan-African Popular Pedagogy Collective) as Director of Special Programs and Organisational Development and is also part of Kongamano Lamapinduzi, where he serves as National Spokesperson.

 

Key Discussion Points & Insights

  1. Society Is Not a Monolith

Drawing from Beautiful Trouble, particularly work by Joshua Kahn Russell, Sungu explains that effective organising requires mapping society into segments, allies, neutral groups, and opponents rather than speaking to a vague “public.”

  1. Lessons from Kenya’s Cost of Living and Finance Bill Protests

Sungu traces organising evolution from earlier cost-of-living struggles to the 2024 mass protests, showing how:

  1. Strategic Escalation & The Domino Effect

A core organising insight:

Shift easier blocks first (neutrals → passive allies → active allies) rather than focusing energy on entrenched opponents.

Once one segment shifts, others often follow.

 

Licensing

Anyone can use this podcast for free, with attribution to Trouble Makers (the podcast).

It is held under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License and can be used for radio or any other media. Our podcast is inspired by the Beautiful Trouble toolbox.

 

Resources & Show Links

Follow Sungu via social media (Sungu Oyoo)

Contact Mwamko Africa for book access and organising resources

 

Credits;

Host Monica Kamandau

Guest: Sungu Oyoo

Editor & Producer: Rodgers George

Music: Mwaduga Salum & Beautiful Trouble