We achieve this through a year-round organizing strategy that integrates leadership development, grassroots advocacy, civic engagement, and strategic communications into a single model for building community power. Our approach moves people from participation to leadership to collective action through a continuous cycle of recruitment, training, organizing, advocacy, storytelling, and evaluation. Community members are engaged through trusted relationships and shared experiences, developed through political education and leadership training, and connected to real opportunities for civic participation and policy advocacy. At the same time, we amplify lived experiences and community knowledge through communications and narrative change strategies that strengthen public understanding and mobilize collective action.
Community Justice Food Alliance
How We Define Our Issues
The Community Justice Alliance defines its work through the interconnected principles of food sovereignty, community power, and equitable systems change. We believe that individuals and communities most impacted by food insecurity, inequitable policies, and systemic barriers must lead the decisions and solutions that shape their futures. Individual food sovereignty means every person has the right to access, produce, and control their own food sources in ways that are sustainable, healthy, and culturally relevant, free from dependence on harmful or inequitable food systems. Community food sovereignty expands this principle collectively, affirming the right of communities to shape and govern how food is grown, distributed, accessed, and shared according to local priorities, cultural traditions, environmental stewardship, and community well-being.
Our mission is to empower individuals and communities to reclaim control over their food systems by advancing sustainable, culturally grounded, and equitable food practices. We work to strengthen local food production, expand access to nutritious and culturally relevant food, and ensure communities have the resources, relationships, and knowledge needed to grow, share, and consume food in ways that honor both people and the environment.
Through this work, we are building long-term grassroots leadership, sustainable organizing infrastructure, and community-driven policy solutions that increase access to healthy food, strengthen local communities, and create lasting systems change rooted in equity, accountability, and collective power.
How We Define Our Path & Focus
Our organizing strategy is rooted in building community power through leadership development, collective action, and narrative change. We focus on creating long-term infrastructure for civic participation and not just short-term campaign engagement.
Our Path:
Engage community members through trusted partnerships, storytelling, outreach, and shared experiences.
Provide training in organizing, advocacy, policy, storytelling, and campaign strategy through cohorts and leadership development.
Connect leaders to real opportunities for advocacy, organizing, and policy engagement—including lobby days, campaigns, and community actions.
Use communications and narrative strategy to elevate lived experience, influence public conversation, and mobilize broader participation.
Build long-term leadership pipelines, strengthen community governance, and continuously evaluate and improve the model.
Our Focus:
Center the voices, experiences, and leadership of impacted communities in decision-making and policy change.
Equip community members with the skills, confidence, and opportunities to lead organizing and advocacy efforts.
Advance equitable policies through coordinated grassroots engagement and strategic advocacy.
Shape public understanding through storytelling, education, and community-centered communications.
Accountability & Transparency
- Maintain shared governance, clear communication, and ongoing feedback loops through community advisory structures.
- Partner with existing organizations and leverage each other’s expertise. Engage in projects that integrate sustainable practices and promote food security.
Goals
- More community members engaged and leading
- Stronger grassroots organizing infrastructure
- Increased civic participation and advocacy actions
- Community-informed policy outcomes
- Sustainable, long-term community leadership and power
Storytelling Matters.
Storytelling is a powerful advocacy tool because it humanizes issues and creates empathy. When people hear a personal story, they can connect emotionally with the experience of others, making abstract policy discussions more concrete and relatable. Storytelling also helps to amplify the voices of those directly impacted by social issues, ensuring their experiences are at the forefront of advocacy efforts.
CJA Talks About Impact of Hunger, Importance Progresssive Taxation at First Lobby Day
The Community Justice Alliance (CJA) hosted its first-ever Lobby Day on Monday, April 7th, where members came together to amplify their voices and advocate…
Historic Milestone: Statewide Food Security Strategy Bill Passes House on Hunger Action Day
We joined hunger advocates from across the state February 10 for Hunger Action Day in Olympia.
It proved to be an eventful…