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What do those temporary Facebook profile pictures really mean?

As so many of us focus our work around online campaigns it’s really useful to know how social media drives norms (or doesn’t….). Here’s a great article from Scientific American  that might help inform some of your future plans!

Also worth reading on the same topic is the Washington Post’s article “More than 26 million people have changed their Facebook picture to a rainbow flag. Here’s why that matters.

From Scientific American

“We know that online peer pressure is powerful. But what we don’t know is whether that pressure is driving real change.

Sharing your opinions and thoughts online is as simple as clicking a button. But you might want to hold off on clicking that button if your opinion or thinking differs from the at-the-moment sentiment sweeping through your social network. To do otherwise, might bring the ire of your connections, and with it ostracism from the group. While it has never been easier to share online, it’s also never been harder to share things that differ from public sentiment or to not offer an opinion in the wake of emotionally charged events. Peer pressure, which was once categorically regarded as a negative driver of drugs and deviant behavior, has morphed to a broader expression of social pressure in online spaces and is more aligned with maintaining group norms.

Why is this an issue? There is a difference between norms that arise as a result of social consideration and norms that are driven by social momentum. The former are designed to improve a group’s cohesiveness by establishing degrees of sameness through agreement; they can be challenged and debated, and there is room for them to change to meet the needs of the widest possible group set. The latter, however, are driven by emotional responses. They become established quickly and decisively, spreading like wildfire, and bear a violence toward those who disagree. This has rightly been described as mob mentality because there is little discussion or debate; and while some people are relieved to have their beliefs finally expressed publicly, others follow because they are swept along by the expressions of the group or because they are afraid to stand apart from the group. In the online world, this has recently been helpful in highlighting cases of harassment but caution is warranted. There is a speed-to-action online that is troubling in that in quickly establishes a stigma tied to behavior or thinking that differs and forces people to act in less than meaningful ways.

In recent years, both of these circumstances have played out on Facebook. In 2012, Facebook allowed users to indicate their organ donor status. Later that year, Facebook asked users to pledge to vote in the presidential election. Both actions were marked by a sharable status that a user could use to broadcast action/intent to his or her network. The organ donor initiative was meant to help reduce the misconceptions that plague the donor community and prevent donor sign-ups. It drew criticism because it highlighted a personal choice as something a person could not be judged on, calling out a status that may differ between people and matter more than if you both liked the television show Friends. Similarly, “I Voted” was meant to mobilize people based on peer pressure. The idea being that if the majority of your friends had voted, you might want to as well. While most people will agree that becoming an organ donor or casting a vote is not a bad thing, the pressure to indicate that you’re in sync with your community might result in a false reporting of your status. There was no means of verifying that you were an organ donor or that you voted. What mattered, however, was the show of solidarity, which was driven by emotional wave of activism and change, respectively.

Behaviors and thoughts spread much in the same way that viruses do: they’re most powerful, and contagious, when passed between people who have close contact with each other. Within social networks–both online and offline–there is evidence to suggest that in groups where there is a great deal of overlap between members in terms of shared connections and interests, there are higher rates of adoption of behaviors and thinking because members are receiving reinforced signals about certain patterns. In these types of clustered networks, behavior and thought exist as complex contagions, requiring multiple points of contact before “infection” is established.

Researchers Nicholas Christakis and James Fowler gave us a good example of the power of clustered networks by tracing obesity, smoking cessation, and happiness through the Framingham network. This network was revealed following a medical study that collected information on personal contacts, which allowed the participants’ social networks to be mapped years later, and for researchers to trace the spread of certain behaviors. Christakis and Fowler found that:

  • If a person became obese, the likelihood his friend would also become obese was 171%.
  • When smokers quit, their friends are 36% more likely to also quit. (Although this effect diminishes as the separation between contacts grow, and loses its efficacy at four degrees of separation.)
  • Happy friends increased the likelihood of an individual being happy by 8%.

The Framingham data illustrated a potential impact of the connections within a network. Our networks help us establish a sense of what’s acceptable–right down to expanding waistlines. The more social reinforcement we receive that certain actions are appropriate, the more likely we are to adopt those actions ourselves.

The catch here is that the Framingham data represents an offline dataset. So in the case of the smokers who quit and influenced their friends to follow, this happened without a temporary profile picture or an “I quit smoking” Facebook status. This behavior played out offline where it was vetted and assessed before it was adopted. That kind of critical thinking is often missing from the online pressure to conform. What does it mean if your profile picture was not updated? Maybe you’re not active on Facebook often, in which case, you’d probably get a pass. But if you are active, does it mean you condone the attacks? What do we really accomplish with these kinds of acts of solidarity? Ultimately, it sends a message about who we are as people; it serves to distinguish us from an other–it says we aren’t like them, we aren’t bad people. But does it stop there?

Beyond our responses to acts of terrorism, we are establishing new data points upon which we can be judged. In the Framingham study, smokers mingled freely with nonsmokers in 1971 and they were distributed evenly throughout the network. However, by 2001 as groups of smokers quit, those who persisted were socially isolated. What if we required people to list their status as smokers or non-smokers–how would our networks shift as a result of this information? The temporary profile picture is a great way to get people to initially think about what is happening around them. But what does it mean beyond that? How does it drive change in a meaningful way? Right now, it may be a conversation point, but it may also provide an easy way out of having to take action in the real world. There are presently voices online highlighting ways that people can help–but will people feel that need to once they’ve updated their profile picture?”

 

The Power of Drag Activism

From The Advocate

In 1971, the day before the U.K. Gay Liberation Front planned to hold London’s first official Pride march, half a dozen radical drag activists took it upon themselves to run a dress rehearsal. It was a resounding success, one which saw them chased down Oxford Street by the metropolitan police. Over a decade earlier, drag queens in Los Angeles had fought back against overzealous cops arresting their friends at Cooper’s Donuts (1959). Those in San Francisco rioted against relentless police harassment at Gene Compton’s cafeteria (1966). And of course, New York queens hurled bricks, clashed with police, and made history at the Stonewall Inn (1969).

Drag queens have been fighting on the front line since the dawn of the modern LGBT rights movement. Even after these flashpoints in queer history, many continued to do so, using their prominent community status to champion equality.

Post Stonewall, Sylvia Rivera and Marsha P. Johnson formed Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries (STAR) to fight for vulnerable LGBT groups, including homeless drag queens and queer runaways (including the transgender women they advocated for, though this was in an era that predates the language we now use for trans and gender-nonconforming people). Since their first performance on Castro Street in the late ’70s, the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence have used drag, protest, and highly controversial religious imagery to raise over $1 million for various AIDS– and LGBT-related causes, educating people along the way. And many queens joined ACT UP during the AIDS epidemic, attending die-ins at Catholic churches and protesting against pharmaceutical companies that withheld HIV drugs.

History is (g)littered with queens who saw their roles as so much more than just performers. No queer fundraiser, protest, or riot is complete without at least one drag queen, it seems. But really it is no surprise that they’re so often at the heart of these movements; for many, the front line is seldom avoidable.

“We’re the ones walking out in the street in drag, so we’re the ones that people know are gay,” says Lady Bunny, herself no stranger to political engagement. “So if you’re a homophobic, drunk asshole out on the town to harass anyone, you might not know if the straight-acting gays are gay. But if you see a big drag queen or a very effeminate male homosexual, that’s going to be who gets the shit on the street — the people who were gay 24-7, not the straight-acting gay men who can pass for straight except for the one day a year they wear a rainbow outfit at Pride.”

The past few years have seen drag surge in popularity, inspired in part by greater acceptance of LGBT culture, as well as the more obvious global success of RuPaul’s Drag Race. When Miley Cyrus performed with Shangela, Laganja Estranja, Alyssa Edwards, and others at last August’s VMAs, it signaled to some that drag was now mainstream. Such sentiments may be
premature, but drag is definitely going through a golden era that a number of drag queens say hasn’t been seen since the 1990s.

Even as drag becomes more commercial, a host of queens continue to use their podiums and performances to challenge inequality and homophobia around the world.

 

Asifa Lahore

 

In the past two years, Ireland’s accidental activist and gender discombobulist Panti Bliss (a.k.a. Rory O’Neill) has been threatened with legal action, sparked a national debate about LGBT rights, seen a video of her speech on homophobia go viral (over 200,000 views in two days) then be remixed by the Pet Shop Boys, and become one of the figureheads for Ireland’s successful referendum on same-sex marriage. While she’s now viewed as one of the most prominent present-day LGBT activists, Panti sees it differently.

“What I see myself as is, well, just very determinedly being what I fucking want to be, and if in order to be that I need to get into the odd scrap, then yes — I’m just not the kind of person to shut up and stay quiet,” Panti says. “Most of the sort of things here that I’m particularly known for, from an activist point of view, is stuff that I’ve wandered into, and I’ve had to become an activist to get myself out of the situation. But I do think of myself as an entertainer first and an activist second.”

In early 2014, when O’Neill appeared out of drag on RTÉ’s The Saturday Night Show, he suggested that two Irish Times journalists, John Waters and Breda O’Brien, as well as the Iona Institute (a Catholic pressure group), were homophobic. And “Pantigate” was born. In the aftermath, O’Neill was accused of defamation (Ireland’s defamation laws are stricter than those in the U.S.), causing the Irish broadcaster to pull the episode from its online player, issue payouts to those mentioned, and have TV host Brendan O’Connor issue an on-air apology. Responding to the cause célèbre, Panti delivered her “Noble Call” at the Abbey Theatre in Dublin: an impassioned speech about oppression and homophobia, which saw everyone from RuPaul to Graham Norton praising her.

“When I made the speech that went viral, the night before I’d met with one of my lawyers — because at the time I had a team of lawyers — and one of my lawyers was a little uncomfortable with me doing it in drag,” says Panti. “His argument was, and I appreciate the argument, that people wouldn’t be able to see past the drag, or they’d be frightened off by the drag, or that it would somehow come between me and my message. But I was very determined to do it in drag, partly because it would have felt like a defeat if I hadn’t, because that is who I am and that is what this is all about.”

Had Panti listened to her lawyers and delivered her speech out of drag, it’s likely it wouldn’t have received anywhere near the attention it did. Drag didn’t addle her point, it amplified it.

“Just by the nature of what I do, my voice is louder than other people’s,” she says. “I think the activism enhances the entertainment. A good activist needs to be an entertainer in a way too, because people are more likely to listen to you if you’re way entertaining. They don’t need to be high-kicking and wearing funny outfits, but they need to have a stage presence in a sense, because that’s why people listen to you. And drag queens are used to that. Stagecraft helps.”

 

Mama Tits

 

As does social media. Drag queens have always been challenging the status quo, but nowadays when they do so they’ll likely be caught on film by a ubiquitous smartphone. At Seattle Pride in 2014, local queen Mama Tits (a.k.a Brian Peters) was videoed eloquently dismantling the logic of antigay Christian protesters who had turned up to picket the parade with homophobic signs and megaphones. A glorious and inspiring takedown, the video — aptly titled “Mama Tits is a Crusader!!” — has now been viewed over 1.8 million times.

Asifa Lahore, the U.K.’s most prominent Muslim drag queen, has achieved national fame over the past few years, with her story explored in documentaries by The Guardian and, more recently, the U.K.’s Channel 4. Since donning a rainbow burqa at a drag competition, she’s become a figurehead for what is known as Britain’s “gaysian” community. Asifa’s performances and activism challenge what it is to be gay and Muslim to such an extent that she’s been condemned by conservative mosques in Britain. To this day, she still receives detailed death threats.

“As soon as I started doing drag, I received death threats, and four years later things haven’t changed,” says Asifa (a.k.a. Asif Quraishi). “There was a time very early on in my career where I nearly gave up doing drag. A boy dressing up as a girl? Was it really worth all the heartache and pain it was causing me and my family? But I knew that if I gave in then I’d be making myself unhappy, so I carried on performing and will continue to perform. Every day I live the point is made. I exist, I matter, and I am alive.”

Asifa received a Pride award from Attitude magazine in June 2015 for her work empowering Britain’s LGBT Muslim community. It’s not been an easy journey. As a young man, Quraishi found his conservative Muslim upbringing conflicted greatly with his sexuality: his family tried to force him into an arranged marriage with a female cousin; when he eventually did come out, he was taken to a doctor; and when he told his imam, he was told to lead a life of celibacy. Quraishi’s activism is driven by his struggle of growing up gay in a hetero-dominant world, something many drag queens (and LGBT activists generally) can attest to.

 

Lady Bunny

 

“When you become a drag queen, you are put on the bottom — no pun intended — of the totem pole in terms of being thought of as a desirable man,” says Lady Bunny. “It can force us to develop a defiant ‘fuck the status quo’ attitude, because we aren’t going to stop doing drag just to fit in. This same defiance enables us to question the church, politicians, or anything else that stands in our way. Most of us are never going to be mainstream, so we don’t need to soft-pedal our opinions.

“Drag queens have the ability to look at themselves and see how they can change it. If you look in the mirror and see a huge jaw, you’re going to need a really tall wig to soften that mug! If you can change how you appear without makeup and drastically rearrange it, that manner of thinking can also enable some to make tough assessments of what society needs. Especially when society is attacking us. Don’t mess with someone whose nuts are shoved up their ass. We’re prone to snap.”

If the ability to change is the nature of drag, then defiance is its essence. Channeling the experiences of a tough and harrowing childhood through their drag gives many queens an edge as activists.

“If you’re on the front line your whole life…you really develop survival skills at an earlier age,” says Peaches Christ, who grew up in a Catholic household. “This comes from a place of growing up and being a sissy in a society that tells you not to, that says the way you’re gendering yourself is abnormal, you shouldn’t want to play with dolls, you shouldn’t be interested in makeup. You’re forced into a position of defending yourself and learning how to stand up for yourself at a very young age.”

 

Peaches Christ

 

In many ways, the performance of drag itself is activism. Whether it’s strutting down RuPaul’s runway in the couture or standing silently on a street corner donning a cheap skirt and wig, drag is an inherent rejection of societal norms and conservative views on gender and sexuality. And it still courts controversy.

When Peaches (a.k.a. Joshua Grannell) took her show Bearbarella to Northern Ireland, she was met by government officials who accused her of blasphemy and lewdness.

“It was a huge reminder that ‘Oh, right, I still stand for something,’” she says. “When we got a standing ovation in Northern Ireland, it wasn’t because my Bearbarella show was brilliant — it’s full of poppers and dildos and about a bear drag queen saving the universe — but it was because of what it stood for, which was, we’re going to do whatever the fuck we want and we’re going to be proud of this stupidity, grossness, and sexuality.”

Drag has always challenged gender conventions and societal norms since the days when cross-dressers in Victorian London like Thomas Boulton and Frederick Park were charged with conspiring to commit an unnatural offense. It wasn’t too long ago that female impersonation was illegal in parts of the United States. In some countries it still is. Ripping off a wig at the climax of a fierce lip-sync, choosing a provocative name, wearing a beard — drag still affords plenty of nuances that can be read as political statements.

“Certainly naming yourself after Jesus is an intentionally antagonistic thing — I was young and I was very angry and I was raised Catholic,” says Peaches. “Performing in drag in some ways is a political act, no matter where you are, and even though it’s more popular, the reality of it is, it’s still very transgressive. There is, unfortunately, in the U.S., such a thing as being too gay. And it really affects our access to other kinds of platforms and entertainments. So while RuPaul’s Drag Race is very popular, I would still argue that it’s cult and niche.”

 

Conchita Wurst

 

Whether the art itself is or isn’t mainstream, there are still many queens whose popularity transcends the queer community. Conchita Wurst became a global icon in 2014 when she won Eurovision, with her Shirley Bassey–esque voice and glamorous style. As a bearded drag queen she was always going to shock mainstream audiences, and it’s this — her particular brand of genderfuck drag — which transformed Wurst (the drag persona of Austrian singer Thomas Neuwirth) from exceptional per former to LGBT champion, voicing a backlash against queer persecution in Russia.

Without its shock factor, drag loses its potency. As a tool for political and social change it becomes blunted. “When it’s mainstream, it’s often defanged a lot,” says Panti. “It doesn’t allow room for the angry drag, the genderfuck drag, the punk elements of drag. I do always worry about that whenever drag is mainstreamed. It’s sanitizing drag in a way. It’s taking away the danger and the sex and the dirt. And I like the danger, the sex, and the dirt. That’s why I got into it in the first place.”

There are even factions within the LGBT community which struggle to accept drag. Earlier this year Glasgow Free Pride — an anti-commercialist alternative to the city’s main event — was roundly criticized by many prominent figures in the LGBT community after it banned drag queens from performing, for fear of upsetting the transgender community.

“As much as I obviously disagreed with Free Pride’s decision on so many levels, I did like that it showed you that drag still has the power to — I don’t want to say offend people, because that’s different — but to make people uneasy and to consider things that they don’t always like to consider,” says Panti.

Despite astounding progress since Cooper’s, Compton’s, and Stonewall, so many issues remain unresolved. But even in such a desensitized era, drag continues to shock the establishment, empower the marginalized, and challenge the norm. It’s transgressive and provocative, symbolic and subversive. In the fight for universal LGBT liberation, the role of drag queens and their art shouldn’t be underestimated.

“[Drag] is a statement in itself,” Panti continues. “And the statement says you’re all wrong — fuck you. It still has the power to discombobulate people, to upset people. And it should, because these issues, about gender and sexuality, are all unresolved.”

Fear-mongering conquers voters in Texas

Check out this interesting article about what messages our opponents use. They really know no limits. This is definitely “going too far”. But beyond outrage, what messaging can we oppose to this fear-mongering tactics. Research shows that upfront combatting this argument would just make things worse. Campaigns would be better off engaging the voters on the values we share with them, like respect, freedom, understanding.

From The Advocate

Activists are stunned after the HERO, or Houston Equal Rights Ordinance, failed with voters by a wide margin Tuesday, reports the Houston Chronicle.

The ordinance had banned discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation, gender identity, and 11 other characteristics in employment, housing, and public accommodation. But anti-LGBT forces rallied, including the lieutenant governor and a veteran antigay activist doctor from Houston, to repeal the measure, which the City Council passed in 2014.

With about 95 percent of votes counted, the ordinance was losing 61 percent to 39 percent, according to the Chronicle.

The opposition painted the law as a “bathroom bill” by preying on fears of transgender people, claiming that men would invade women’s restrooms to assault them; such behavior has never been reported as a result of a trans-inclusive equal rights ordinance.

“Prop. 1 is not about equality. That’s already the law,” said Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick in a video posted as part of the campaign to Vote NO. “It’s about letting men in women’s locker rooms and bathrooms.”

On the other side of the fight, the ordinance had received public support from President Obama, Hillary Clinton, and Bernie Sanders. It also got the backing of nearly 60 companies — including Apple, General Electric, Hewlett Packard, BASF, and EMC.

It’s a blow specifically to the city’s out mayor, Annise Parker. She had pressed for the law and was then sued when its detractors pushed to get the repeal placed on the ballot. The Texas Supreme Court ruled in July that Houston officials either had to repeal HERO or put it up for a vote by the public.

Human Rights Campaign president Chad Griffin noted that Houston becomes the largest American city without protection from discrimination for LGBT citizens, and he warned that opponents of equality will try to expand on their success in other parts of the country.

“It’s almost unbelievable that this could happen in a city like Houston, but make no mistake: if we don’t double down today, we’ll face the same thing again and again in cities across the nation,” said Griffin in an email to HRC supporters.

The coalition formed to fight for the ordinance, Houston Unites, said Tuesday that it would press to have it restored.

“We are gravely disappointed that for now, Houstonians will continue to be denied critical local protections against discrimination,” the group said in a statement on its Facebook page, adding later that “Tonight is not the end.”

Watch an example of the video campaign run against HERO:

 

 

Are you Browsing Safely?

Safety and Security Online

Browsing and Communicating Securely Online

When you’re signing into any website, always make sure to check that you’re URL begins with https:// (and not just http://). This signals that your website connection is secure, encrypted, and less prone to unwanted snooping, tampering, or identity theft online.

However, while many websites are starting to provide https:// as a standard service, there are still large amounts of websites that do not automatically load through a secure connection.  This means that to ensure you are entering each and every website securely, you would have to check your URL before and after it’s loaded and even then, some websites may not load in https:// mode. The Tor Project and the Electronic Frontier Foundation collaborated to provide a solution to this by creating HTTPS Everywhere, which “is a Firefox, Chrome, and Opera extension that encrypts your communications with many major websites, making your browsing more secure.”

  • Be aware that HTTPS:// is not automatically applied when browsing through your mobile phone.  To remain safe, retype https:// in your URL.
  • If you are unsure of your connection, check to see if the HTTPS:// in your browser is green (rather than blue which would indicate a standard unsecure http connection).

As activists, campaigners, and human rights defenders, our online privacy and anonymity is vital to staying safe.  Tor is a free software and open network that bounces your communications around distributed networks which prevents anyone monitoring your online activities to learn about sites you are using, your browsing history or location.

Tor has several projects worth looking into whether or not you are concerned with your online safety (although with reports of governments worldwide snooping on citizens, you should be!) including Tor Browser (available for windows, Mac OSX, and Linux) for your computer and Orbot for Android phones.

Riseup provides online communication tools for people and groups working on liberatory social change. They are a project working to create democratic alternatives and practice self-determination by controlling their own secure means of communications. Riseup provides secure and private email accounts, mailing lists, and has even started providing new services such as VPN and chat.

Chatting

Chatting and sharing information online is never 100% secure BUT there are applications, browser extensions, and other ways to keep yourself as safe as possible while organizing your campaigns, taking part in public actions, or connecting with other activists online.  Here are a few that may just help alleviate your security concerns:

Cryptocat is a fun, accessible app for having encrypted chat with your friends, right in your browser and mobile phone. Everything is encrypted before it leaves your computer. Even the Cryptocat network itself can’t read your messages. Cryptocat is open source, free software, developed by encryption professionals to make privacy accessible to everyone.

Off-the-Record” Software can be added to free open-source instant messaging platforms like Pidgin or Adium. On these platforms, you’re able to organize and manage different instant messaging accounts on one interface. When you then install OTR, your chats are encrypted and authenticated, so you can rest assured you’re talking to a friend.

ChatSecure: Encrypted Messages on iOS and Android. ChatSecure is a free and open source messaging app that features OTR encryption over XMPP. You can connect to your existing accounts on Facebook or Google, create new accounts on public XMPP servers(including via Tor), or even connect to your own server for extra security.

All of the above chat software and apps require an Internet connection provided by either Wifi or your mobile carrier. As we witnessed with the Arab Spring and other moments of national political tension, governments can switch off or limit connectivity in public spaces to make communications about public actions, safety protocols, and other information between activists and citizens even harder to share to the widespread audiences that social media platforms provide. This is where FireChat comes in.

FireChat is the messaging app that works when and where others cannot. FireChat uses peer-to-peer mesh networking technology to connect people and mobile devices even when no Internet connection or mobile data service is available. FireChat has been among the top 10 social networking applications in 124 countries. From Burning Man to Taiwan, HongKong, Delhi, Moscow, Manila, Paris, Srinagar, Kuala Lumpur and Austin, pro-democracy protesters, disaster relief organizations, leaders, and artists are choosing FireChat to stay connected to their friends and communities.

Is a Picture Worth a 1000 Words?

Photography as a Form of Artistic Resistance

As LGBTQ rights make bigger and bigger grounds every year in the fight against discrimination based on sexual orientation, gender identity, race, class, and all the ways these identities intersect – photography has been a useful tool towards putting a face to those that went around unseen. Some of these photography projects have been in direct response to political oppression such as the “Proud To Protest” campaign and others, like The Identity Project stand as testimonies against normative gender binaries and expression.

Related Articles:

Why the Activist Poster is Here to Stay

Using Craft Art To Explore Contemporary LGBTQ Culture

Creative Resistance: Why We Need to Incorporate Art Into Our Activism

 

How to be SMART while Building your Campaign

Your campaign objectives should be:

Specific

Measurable

Achievable

Relevant

Time-Bound

 

This will help you set clear targets that can become a reality, focus your campaign team around agreed upon goals and objectives,  remain on target throughout your work, stick to set deadlines, continuously assess your progress, and utilize all your resources.

 

  1. Specific

 

Your campaign must have clear and specific objectives to guide your actions and goals to your ultimate campaign vision. Establishing SMART objectives involves creating a campaign timeline and stating particular steps needed to keep on track.

 

Unspecific Objectives Specific Objectives
Help LGBTQ homeless youth.
  • Raising awareness of the amount of LGBTQ youth made homeless every year.
  • Open/collaborate with shelters willing to deal directly with LGBTQ youth.
  • Contact stakeholders who would be willing to support and advance the cause.
  • Create a support center/community center for LGBTQ youth to receive medical advice, counselling, career advice, etc.
Improve working conditions for LGBTQ individuals
  • Lobby for anti-discriminatory legislation.
  • Contact relevant stakeholders for collaboration opportunities or letters of support
  • Establish anti-discriminatory policies in the workplace.
  • Organize mandatory anti-discrimination/anti-harassment training for employees and employers.

 

Whatever you decide to focus on, knowing what advocacy groups are already working on similar initiatives and what key pieces of legislations may affect your cause will help inform your timeline for your campaign objectives and ultimate vision. This will also provide an opportunity for you to form collaborations with other organizations and get statements of support from members of the community, medical professionals, or politicians to advance your cause to overturn or resolve particular social, political, or legal issues.

 

  1. Measurable & Achievable

 

Making sure your campaign objectives can be accomplished allows you to measure your successes and analyze your campaign advancements. Whether your campaign is ambitious or relatively straightforward, it is important for you and your team to be able to recognize and work clearly on achievable objectives.

 

The victories or milestones throughout your campaign will be indicative of the success of your campaign. This requires keeping track of the WHAT, WHY, WHERE, WHO, and HOW. It is important to not only know WHO the stakeholders are, but WHY they are for/against your cause, WHAT the pressing issues advancing/delaying your successes are, WHERE to focus your strategies, and HOW to target pressure points/people that will help you get one step closer to your campaign objectives or ultimate vision . To achieve this it is a good idea to review your SWOT and the internal/external factors influencing your campaign (see SWOT).   

 

  1. Relevant

 

Now that you have set your campaign objectives, it is important to remain on track. At times social or political opportunities present themselves. While it may seem necessary or even natural to capitalize on these moments (through a direct action), this opportunity may also derail you from your original campaign objectives. In these situations, it is advisable to review your campaign objectives. This will help determine if any planned actions for to the opportunity that has presented itself will be relevant to the course of action/objectives you had originally anticipated.

 

  1. Time-Bound

 

Both your campaign objectives and plan need to be time-bound. This means a specific target date must be set for each of your actions, specific objectives, and overall plan will be achieved.

 

For example: If your campaign is meant to span over a period or 1, 2, or 5+ years, then you’ll need to set dates for when each of your objectives will be accomplished within this time frame. By updating, reassessing, and following the procedures for monitoring and evaluating your internal and external factors that arise during your campaign, you will be able to assess whether your anticipated timeframe is feasible.