Lesson Notes
| Site: | khisaesther167878.gnomio.com |
| Course: | Advocacy and lobbying |
| Book: | Lesson Notes |
| Printed by: | Guest user |
| Date: | Wednesday, 20 May 2026, 6:52 PM |
Description
1. Lesson Notes
A. Conceptual Definitions
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Advocacy: An umbrella term for organized efforts to influence public perception, social attitudes, or institutional policies. It is a broad process of "speaking up" for a cause.
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Lobbying: A specialized form of advocacy that involves direct communication with legislators or government officials to influence the passage, defeat, or amendment of specific legislation.
B. The "Direct vs. Grassroots" Distinction
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Direct Lobbying: Communicating directly with a policy-maker (e.g., meeting a Member of Parliament to discuss a specific Bill).
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Grassroots Lobbying: Mobilizing the general public to contact their representatives about a specific piece of legislation.
C. The Influence Chain (Stakeholders) Successful influence requires understanding who holds the power. Stakeholders usually fall into three categories:
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Primary Targets: The actual decision-makers (e.g., The Principal, a Cabinet Secretary, a Board of Directors).
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Secondary Targets: People who have influence over the decision-maker (e.g., staff members, advisors, or major donors).
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Allies/Coalitions: Other groups with shared interests who can amplify your voice.
D. Why Distinguish the Two? For technical institutions and NGOs, the distinction is often a legal and financial one. Many funding sources allow for "Advocacy" (education and awareness) but strictly limit or prohibit "Lobbying" (influencing specific laws) to maintain tax-exempt status or neutrality.