PUBLIC POLICY ADVOCACY BEST PRACTICE
Submitted by christian on Tue, 03/24/2015 - 12:45
Key Principles
- Acknowledge that there is no magic formula
- Acknowledge the luck in having the right people, at the right place at the right time in government, and be prepared to capitalize on opportunities that come up
- Be patient, as change happens slowly. Policy change can require persistence and a lot of hard work
- Cultivate positive relationships
Three Steps
1. Research the political and public policy context which your issue fits
- What jurisdictions are you targeting. (e.g. national, EU level)
- What/who are the key decision-makers? (e.g. ministers, MPs, MEPs)
- What processes are involved and what timelines are associated with them (e.g. legislative, budgetary)
- What are the politics around your issue? (e.g. does your issue poll well with citizens? Is your issue associated with an opposing political party?)
- What is the level of political will associated with your issue? (e.g. are key decision-makers willing to support your issue?)
- What incentives will generate political will? (e.g. can you demonstrate that other jurisdictions have implemented your policy change? can you demonstrate that your policy change will save the government money?)
- What is a relaistic 'ask'? (e.g. what is your ideal outcome, and if achieving that is unrealistic, what outcome would you be willing to settle for?)
- What kind of support do you need to demonstrate (e.g. specific constituencies, general public).
2. Preparation: Use the information gathered in step one to do the following:
- Establish your 'ask'
- Identify champions in government, other allies, potential allies, and opposition
- Really get to know your issue (e.g. arguments for and against, supporting evidence)
- Develop your message using the language of your target audience
- Identify the face of your campaign
3. Action: Schedule an action plan that takes into consideration all the information you have gathered during research and preparation (Steps 1 and 2). Action plans might outline:
- A description of actions to be taken (e.g. recruiting supporters, organizing a letter writing camapign, issuing press releases and holding media events, organizing workshops or conferences, or meeting with decision-makers)
- A list of who will do what
- A timeline for actions
- The desired results from each action
- A mechanism to ensure that the action plan is implemented.
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