Drivers of Political Mobilization
By naturally participate in the 7 arenas of …
people…which are sustained and developed by those who feel obligated to to make a difference:
In
, these become adept at using some of the 6 ……which are sustained and developed by self-interestedly taking advantage of emerging :
In
, harness one or more of the 5 …now read on…
The 5 Drivers of Mobilization
The drivers are described in turn below using this Schema
- Function i.e. the goal as part of
- Mobilizer and Mobilized i.e. who mobilizes whom.
- Typical Feature(s)
- Requirements for Success
- Structure details
the self-interested top/third level,
the obligatory second level, &
the natural base level. - Examples
- Problems and Criticisms
See a summary in a matrix for an easier comparison of the five forms of .
To marshal a group to persuade a decision-maker or body in wider society to choose a particular path when a likely alternative choice (or no choice) would be damaging to the group’s interests.
Mobilizer & Mobilized
of the relevant membership organization mobilizes with connections to power-brokers, decision-makers and the media, as well as non-member supporters and sometimes all members (e.g. if mass action is judged necessary or a fighting fund is required).
Typical Features
The atmosphere is warlike: «red alert» is sounded and everyone is at «battle stations». Efforts seek to entice cooperation and coerce capitulation.
Requirements for Success
- Use a war-footing metaphor to create a well-financed, comprehensive, well-informed and organized approach.
- Use expert legal advice at every step.
- Bring pressure via media, lobbying, diplomacy, and offering or calling in favours.
The
Problems and Criticisms
- The general public may never know about the influence brought to bear.
- Deepest pockets win the day.
- Improper pressures are employed.
- Produces unjust or irrational decisions (from a public good perspective).
- Delays sensible resolution and worsens the underlying basis of the crisis.
Function
To reassure the public that a widespread concern is being seriously addressed by the responsible entity (or entities).
Mobilizer & Mobilized
or mobilizes of the relevant department or membership organization plus (commercial, legal &/or academic) as appropriate.
Typical Feature
Practical recommendations answering the question: «what are you doing to help?».
Requirements for Success
- Speed in appraising and responding; command of willing specialist expertise; decisiveness of response.
- Commitment of extra resources: funds are obtained from a contingency fund for this purpose, or raised via an emergency appeal to the public.
- Use of communication channels to provide a continuing report of progress on the issue.
Problems and Criticisms
- Targets public anxiety and sentiment rather than the underlying problems.
- Decisions are rushed and may be unnecessary, ineffective or harmful.
- Hijacks or disrupts the real agenda—the issue may be a chimera or unimportant.
- Government measures typically help some people and groups and not others.
- Once the public is soothed, aid is often uncertain, onerous to get, or forgotten.
Function
To demonstrate existing values in a specific personal and responsible action that has a practical socio-political effect when many others in society act similarly.
Mobilizer & Mobilized
e.g. within a political party, a public advocacy group, or a membership organization mobilizes e.g. the general public, a section of society, the membership, or a community.
Typical Feature
Simple time-limited action that can be taken as evidence of a genuine personal view, such as: voting, sending a pre-written letter, boycotting, marching, donating, signing a petition.
Requirements for Success
- The must have intrinsic popularity amongst the target public, and the crisis should be timely for them (e.g. not mixed up with other crises).
- Effective organization, management and funding, including use of volunteers. Sometimes expert consultants may usefully contribute.
The
Problems and Criticisms
- Campaigners can be irritating, boring, and intrusive if not timely or relevant.
- Canvassing can be counter-productive if the values are not widely observed.
- Campaigners become exhausted and demoralized if unpopularity is severe.
To use the deepest convictions of a section of society to stop the perpetration of social harm, actual or potential.
Mobilizer & Mobilized
, highly articulate and with the appropriate credentials mobilizes who regard themselves as «true believers».
Typical Feature
Willingness to apply forceful measures to get a result that accords with a dogma. So leaders get labelled as rabble-rousers or ring-leaders; and followers get similarly disparaged.
Requirements for Success
- Backing from within the establishment—without which the radicals and their views would not survive in society.
- Conviction, passion and combativeness; readiness to engage in activities that put their own members and others at risk of harm.
- Life-defining ideological commitment by the believers.
Committed believers find it
Problems and Criticisms
- Too extremist, too fundamentalist.
- Rallies become riotous, incite illegality, and may escalate to violence.
- Countervailing groups and spontaneous counter-rallies develop.
- Some forceful tactics are contentious and border on illegality.
- Ends are viewed as justifying the means:
Function
To unite and strengthen an affected class, group or community by articulating right and wrong despite widespread resistance to change within wider society.
Mobilizer & Mobilized
with a passion to champion the needs of others from a moral perspective and capable of offering a «message of hope» mobilizes and
Not all
respond, but those who have faith and seek a means to channel their aspirations do. are external supporters who are ready to give time, energy and possibly money.Typical Feature
Appeals for unity, non-violence, and perseverance.
Requirements for Success
- Tolerance of an unacceptable status quo combined with a belief that persevering in protesting and even suffering is worthwhile for change to come sooner or later.
- Sense of outrage leading to a willingness of uninvolved people to join rallies and provide other tangible support.
- The leader’s home institution provides backing and publicity.
Problems and Criticisms
- Claims and views seem utopian and expectations look unrealistic, especially in the early stages.
- Mass rallies may be disruptive and costly in policing.
- Agitators may join crowds and provoke unnecessary and unwanted violence.
- See an overview with more details via a matrix summary.
OR
- Continue to developing public policy.
Originally posted: August-2009; Last updated: 15-Nov-2010