Community Mobilization & Multistakeholder Engagement
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Transcript Community Mobilization & Multistakeholder Engagement
Community Mobilization &
Multistakeholder Engagement
CMS Road Show – Luzon
PhilDHRAA Partnership Center
29 to 31 August 2013
Learning Objectives
At the end of this session, you should be able to:
Demonstrate increased knowledge of the principles
of and key steps in community mobilization;
Apply some tools for engaging different community
stakeholders in collective action;
Identify tasks in involving communities and some
strategies to facilitate stakeholder engagement.
Your Idea of a “Community”
What comes to mind when you
first hear the word “community”?
What is a Community?
A set of people that share any or all of the following:
Territory
Resources
Language
Culture
Religion
Occupation
Interests
Etc.
We all belong to a community.
What are some of the communities you belong to?
What is a Community?
People are the heart of a community.
Heterogeneous
Diverse needs
Different motivations
Diverse skills
Various resources
How do we bring them together and harness what they have
to offer?
Community Mobilization
The process of building social relationships in pursuit
of common community interests.
Increases participatory decision-making processes by
bringing diverse stakeholders into a common process
Expands inclusion of often marginalized populations,
such as women, youth, persons with disabilities, the
elderly, and religious or ethnic minorities
Depends on local resources, both human and material
Fosters stronger relationships between local
government, businesses, community members and
CBO/NGOs
Ensures local ownership of development
Promotes a more active and informed citizenry
Community Mobilization:
Some Principles
Participation
When people are involved from design to
implementation and assessment, ownership is high
Context sensitivity
Local solutions to local problems
Empowerment, not dependence
Communities as actors, not recipients
Prepare: Get to
know the
community
DO!
Sustain
WHAT,
WHERE,
WHEN?
Steps in
Community
Mobilization
Develop & execute
a community
action plan
WHO?
Involve
stakeholders
WHY?
Issue analysis &
community
visioning
1. Get to Know the Community
Core area of community development
E.g., Livelihood, Maternal health, Public education
Identify a common issue that the community can get
involved in.
Gather information on the community & the issue by:
Talking to people in the community
Talking to community leaders
Conducting surveys, FGDs (formal)
Plan for a community gathering or dialogue on the
issue.*
2. Involve Stakeholders
Decide who is
crucial to involve
Stakeholders: groups and individuals
who
Primary: are directly involved in the
issue; can affect or are affected by the
issue
Secondary: intermediaries; can help
facilitate awareness and understanding;
can mobilize additional support or
resources
Be inclusive
Core group of
actors
Roles
E.g., Who
would be a
good
infomediary/lea
der?
3. Organize around an issue
Identify and prioritize current underlying
conditions
What are the current problems in public education
in the school? (Context)
What causes these problems? (Cause)
Which of these can we do something about?
(Priorities)
Develop a community vision
How does a good public education system in our
community look like?
What key changes/improvements are in place?
3. Organize around an issue
Vision - summarize your community’s dream for the
future. The vision should be:
Easy to communicate to potential new members.
Uplifting and inspiring, clearly communicating your
hopes for your community.
A reflection of the perspective of the community it
represents.
Mission - state your community mission. It should
include:
A statement of what it is going to do and why.
Widely inclusive language to avoid limiting potential
new members and strategies with which to bring
about the vision.
3. Organize around an issue
Community Road
Map
4. Community Action Planning
What strategies & activities are needed?
Awareness raising
Fundraising
Capacity building
Who can contribute what?
Resources
Expertise
Timeline
How do we know we’ve achieved our objectives?
Measure , evaluate
Keeping track of achievements builds confidence
5. Sustain
Community planning on how to sustain efforts
Commitments and roles
Next steps: scale up/expand or repeat?
Continuous capacity building requirements
Your Role as Community Mobilizer
You as leader
Finding leaders in the
community
WHICH FACILITATES GREATER COMMUNITY OWNERSHIP AND
INVOLVEMENT?
Multi-Stakeholder Engagement
Key Tasks as CMS Area Coordinators
Identify school community stakeholders to involve
(macro)
Facilitating stakeholder participation in identifying
and solving issues (micro)
Bringing Stakeholders on Board:
Mapping
1. The PowerInterest Grid
(Bryson, 1995)
Power to influence
the issue
High
Low
Interest in the issue
High
Low
Bringing Stakeholders on Board:
Mapping
Keep satisfied;
Meet their
needs
Key Players;
Manage closely
1. The PowerInterest Grid
(Bryson, 1995)
Power to influence
the issue
Minimal Effort
Keep informed;
Show
consideration
High
Low
Interest in the issue
High
Low
Bringing Stakeholders on Board:
Mapping
2. ImpactAttitude Grid
(Riley & Weintraub)
Impact, or influence
High
Low
Attitude
Positive
Negative
Top 3-5 Action
Points
high
*
x
–
x
*
+
x
*
x
x
low
Exercise: Mapping School Stakeholders
Form 2 groups
Identify 5-8 key stakeholders in CMS communities
Parents, students, school administrator, DepEd, local
media, infomediary, teachers, etc.
Group 1: Using the Power-Interest Grid, map
stakeholders and identify one action per quadrant
Group 2: Using the Impact-Attitude Grid, map the
stakeholders and identify three action points
Assign a reporter.
Three (3) minutes to report
Stakeholder Participation
Stakeholder Participation
You’ve identified your key stakeholders…
NOW WHAT?
Plan activities to involve key stakeholders
Keep them involved, from start to finish
Allow them to find solutions to their problems
Empowerment is not about telling them what to do or
doing things for them but building their capacity to do
Stakeholder Participation:
Scenarios
Scenario 1: The school year is about to start but
there are no funds to get the school ready. The
classrooms and school grounds are dirty and the
furniture are not in their proper places.
Talk to the principal and compel her to find funds
for cleaners.
b. Clean the entire school yourself.
c. Mobilize school community members to volunteer
to get the school ready.
a.
Stakeholder Participation:
Scenarios
Scenario 2: You want to set up regular data
updating activities for CMS in a new school.
However, you live in a different city and it’s costly
for you to keep traveling to the school to coordinate
the activities. What’s the best way to empower the
school community to conduct monitoring?
What are concrete ways
to get community
stakeholders to
participate during…
Planning sessions
Community dialogue
Problem-solving sessions
Stakeholder Participation:
Strategies
Brainstorming
Generate as many ideas
Suspend judgment
Encourage creativity
Everyone pitches in
Sample Process
Individuals write down ideas
Ideas are posted and similar ideas grouped together
Group reviews ideas
Enhances ideas
Adds other ideas
Stakeholder Participation:
Strategies
Stepladder technique
Individuals to small groups to big group
Allows every individual to contribute
Results in a few, well thought out ideas
Sample Process
Each individual writes down an idea
Form groups of two and enhance the ideas
The process is repeated in groups of three, four, etc.
until only two groups remain
Big group comes together to share and finalize ideas
Stakeholder Participation:
Strategies
Contributions Assessment
Begins with what each individual can contribute
Action-oriented
Good way of securing commitment and active
involvement of members
Sample Process
Each individual writes down 1-2 things they
contribute
These are posted and shared to the big group
Group constructs a workplan based on
commitments and adds what else can be done
Roleplay Exercise
Problem: How can we increase awareness on the lack
of textbooks in the school?
Roles
Area coordinator (Facilitator)
Local DepEd representative
Parent leader
Student representative
Local media
Local business owner
Decide on a strategy for facilitating stakeholder
participation: brainstorming, stepladder, contributions
assessment
Roleplay Exercise
Reflect on your experience.
Did everyone participate? Why or why not?
How did the process ensure participation of
stakeholders?
What was the role of the facilitator in the process?
Stakeholder Participation:
Tips for Community Mobilizers
Compel: Anchor participation on their interests
E.g., Parents want their children to have access to
good quality education
Invite stakeholders to bring in their resources and
knowledge to the process
E.g., Local businesses can donate resources to
schools, as part of their CSR program
Facilitate local participation on coming up to
solutions to problems
Other Activities to Involve Stakeholders in
Joint Context and Stakeholders Analysis
Awareness Raising Campaigns
IEC, Fun run, Fiesta, Word-of-mouth
Monitoring activities
Data updating
Multi-stakeholder Problem-Solving Sessions
Resource Generation
Fundraising
Salamat!