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1 Introduction and Basic Elements of Advocacy
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1 Introduction and Basic Elements of Advocacy. 2 What is advocacy? A systematic approach to changing policies and programs to reflect the needs of individuals.

Dec 28, 2015

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Maude Wood
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Page 1: 1 Introduction and Basic Elements of Advocacy. 2 What is advocacy? A systematic approach to changing policies and programs to reflect the needs of individuals.

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Introduction and Basic Elementsof Advocacy

Page 2: 1 Introduction and Basic Elements of Advocacy. 2 What is advocacy? A systematic approach to changing policies and programs to reflect the needs of individuals.

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What is advocacy?

•A systematic approach to changing policies and programs to reflect the needs of individuals and communities

Page 3: 1 Introduction and Basic Elements of Advocacy. 2 What is advocacy? A systematic approach to changing policies and programs to reflect the needs of individuals.

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Goals of advocacy

•Identify a problem, propose a solution

•Achieve policy, program, resource allocation changes that benefit population involved in the process

Page 4: 1 Introduction and Basic Elements of Advocacy. 2 What is advocacy? A systematic approach to changing policies and programs to reflect the needs of individuals.

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What can advocacy change?•Public policy

•Laws and regulations

•Resource allocation, use of funds

•Access to services

•Health insurance and public benefits, access to drugs and medications

•Reduce disparities among underserved

•Public opinion about cancer -- de-stigmatize and gain support for cancer policies

Page 5: 1 Introduction and Basic Elements of Advocacy. 2 What is advocacy? A systematic approach to changing policies and programs to reflect the needs of individuals.

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Basic elements of advocacy•Not an ordered, linear process

•Multi-faceted, fluid, dynamic

•Composed of essential ingredients to be combined

•Frequently carried out in turbulent environments

•Careful planning helps to seize opportunities, use resources effectively, maintain focus on objectives

Page 6: 1 Introduction and Basic Elements of Advocacy. 2 What is advocacy? A systematic approach to changing policies and programs to reflect the needs of individuals.

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Stages of advocacy•Stage one: identifying issues

•Stage two: Developing possible solutions

•Stage three: Building support (internal and external)

•Stage four: Policy action

•Stage five: Evaluation

Page 7: 1 Introduction and Basic Elements of Advocacy. 2 What is advocacy? A systematic approach to changing policies and programs to reflect the needs of individuals.

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Stage one -- identifying issues•Agenda setting occurs

•Select from unlimited number of problems, the issue to place on the policy action agenda

Page 8: 1 Introduction and Basic Elements of Advocacy. 2 What is advocacy? A systematic approach to changing policies and programs to reflect the needs of individuals.

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Stage two -- Solution formulation•Follows issue identification rapidly

•Formulate and propose solutions to problems and choose one that is feasible -- politically, economically, socially

Page 9: 1 Introduction and Basic Elements of Advocacy. 2 What is advocacy? A systematic approach to changing policies and programs to reflect the needs of individuals.

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Stage three -- Building political will•Centerpiece of advocacy

•Building coalitions

•Meeting with decision-makers

•Raising awareness

•Formulating effective messages

Page 10: 1 Introduction and Basic Elements of Advocacy. 2 What is advocacy? A systematic approach to changing policies and programs to reflect the needs of individuals.

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Stage four -- Policy action•A “window of opportunity” is created when a problem is recognized, solution accepted, political will to act ALL AT THE SAME TIME

•Must act quickly to capitalize on opportunity

•Following advocacy strategy will increase likelihood of creating windows of opportunity

Page 11: 1 Introduction and Basic Elements of Advocacy. 2 What is advocacy? A systematic approach to changing policies and programs to reflect the needs of individuals.

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Stage five -- evaluation•Often overlooked

•Critical part of advocacy planning

•Assessing effectiveness of previous efforts helps to set new advocacy goals

Page 12: 1 Introduction and Basic Elements of Advocacy. 2 What is advocacy? A systematic approach to changing policies and programs to reflect the needs of individuals.

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What is the advocacy continuum?

•Self-advocacy

•Family and friends

•Community

•Systems-level change

Page 13: 1 Introduction and Basic Elements of Advocacy. 2 What is advocacy? A systematic approach to changing policies and programs to reflect the needs of individuals.

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What is grassroots advocacy and what are the skills needed ?

•Grassroots advocacy refers to involving individuals from the general as a fundamental political and economic group. Mobilizing the community and empowering individuals to pressure decision makers on issues important to them.

Page 14: 1 Introduction and Basic Elements of Advocacy. 2 What is advocacy? A systematic approach to changing policies and programs to reflect the needs of individuals.

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Successful advocacy -- key points• Develop and follow an advocacy plan

• Select tactics carefully (influencing activities)

• Know your target audience

• Communicate effectively

• Use mass media strategically

• Do your homework (get appropriate data)

• Be proactive, as well as reactive

• Seek collaboration and partnership to enlarge your base and enhance credibility

Page 15: 1 Introduction and Basic Elements of Advocacy. 2 What is advocacy? A systematic approach to changing policies and programs to reflect the needs of individuals.

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Successful advocacy -- key points, continued•Involve experts from multiple disciplines

•Involve key stakeholders throughout the process

•Capitalize on current “hot” political or media issues to build momentum

•History repeats itself -- seek examples from successful campaigns on similar policies or from other health sectors to learn from

Page 16: 1 Introduction and Basic Elements of Advocacy. 2 What is advocacy? A systematic approach to changing policies and programs to reflect the needs of individuals.

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Conclusion•Advocacy is a critical component of cancer control

•Advocacy can help your NGO to deliver your mission, de-stigmatize cancer, garner public support for favorable policies

•Preparation can help you to take advantage of “windows of opportunity”

•Your NGO must be prepared to act quickly to capitalize on advocacy opportunities