SojoAction
Economic Justice

SojoAction: Economic Justice

Our economic justice work is focused on policy changes aimed at reforming government systems and economic institutions and principles to allow all people to have the foundation and stability to support their families, churches and communities, and live dignified, productive lives.

Our work seeks to address the root causes of injustices and address long-term needs through public and collective actions aimed at political and structural changes. It is much broader than typical individual acts of charity done by many individuals and churches because those only seek to address the effects of injustices and respond to immediate needs and, while important, fall far short of addressing the needs of the millions of Americans living in poverty.

Our Goals:

  • Eradication of extreme poverty and hunger in the United States by 2030
  • Increase the federal minimum wage
  • Protect and strengthen critical safety net programs that are proven to reduce poverty and hunger such as SNAP, WIC, and low-income and affordable housing
  • Support families through access to affordable child care, paid family medical leave, and parental leave
  • Ensure financial and physical health of every American by strengthening and protecting the Affordable Care Act, closing the Medicaid coverage gap, and reduce prescription drug prices

 

Economic Justice
Resources

Our Work

The past year has been a time of isolation, change, and lament. For many of us, it may have even changed how we think about justice and loving our neighbors. Join us for 7 days and reflect on how the past year has changed us and how we think about community, faith, and how we can build a better world together.
Mutual aid in an age of estrangement. How do we build communities of care and concern?
When people move more often, Buy Nothing groups and other mutual aid can be helpful in getting to know people next door. Mutual aid can encompass sharing items, such as food or tools, or offering free services like transportation, health care, or translation.
Since 2011, church leaders from many families of U.S. Christianity have worked together to maintain a Circle of Protection around people struggling with hunger, poverty, and injustice.
Economic Justice
Latest Stories
  • The book Grace Can Lead Us Home by Kevin Nye has a cover showing a maze in the shape of a house. The book is floating in the air, cast against a pale yellow background.
    ‘Grace Can Lead Us Home’ argues that a merit-based model for providing housing is the opposite of God's given grace.

    Grace Can Lead Us Home argues that a merit-based model for providing housing is the opposite of God's given grace.

    by Karen González
  • An illustrated headshot of Clarence Jordan with another illustration of him posing with his wife. A protest banner is being lifted up by a group of people next to a sign that says, "Koinonia Farm."
    Clarence Jordan and the Koinonia community fought Jim Crow with a “cow library” and a radical faith. There's still work to do today.

    Clarence Jordan and the Koinonia community fought Jim Crow with a “cow library” and a radical faith. There's still work to do today.

    by Mitchell Atencio
  • A break in a canopy of green trees shows the clear blue skies, outlined in the shape of a human head looking upward.
    Entering into the holiday season with an Indigenous approach to gratitude.

    Entering into the holiday season with an Indigenous approach to gratitude.

    by José Humphreys III