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Community mobilisation Click to add your name Pacific Sexual Diversity Network Leadership Development Suva, 23 – 25 February 2009.

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Presentation on theme: "Community mobilisation Click to add your name Pacific Sexual Diversity Network Leadership Development Suva, 23 – 25 February 2009."— Presentation transcript:

1 Community mobilisation Click to add your name Pacific Sexual Diversity Network Leadership Development Suva, 23 – 25 February 2009

2 Overview of session Presentation – basic information Group work – example scenarios Practical application of community mobilisation to your activities

3 What is community mobilisation? A capacity building process through which individuals, groups or organisations plan, carry out and evaluate activities on a participatory and sustained basis to improve their health and other needs, either on their own or stimulated by others. –International HIV/AIDS Alliance, All Together Now, 2003

4 What is community mobilisation? A capacity building process through which individuals, groups or organisations plan, carry out and evaluate activities on a participatory and sustained basis to improve their health and other needs, either on their own or stimulated by others. –International HIV/AIDS Alliance, All Together Now, 2003

5 More on community mobilisation A long term process, not a one-off event A way of working or method, not a specific activity Emphasises communication, debate and cooperation Seeks to bring coordination Is empowering and tries to involve many people, especially people marginalised from existing processes or structures Importantly, it leads to action and social change, often to address inequality An (ethical) attitude, not just activities

6 What are the benefits? Enables communities to determine their own development Builds trust within communities so they can work together effectively Builds civil society – capacity of communities to work with government and other sectors (health services, research etc.) Helps to apply political pressure and create positive change Reduces HIV/AIDS incidence

7 Some principles Welcome wide involvement even from people who disagree with you Facilitation of discussion, providing opportunities for everyone to have their say Work together on issues everyone can agree on, look for points of consensus Avoid top-down approaches where people in leadership positions make decisions for everyone else Process is as important as outcome even if it takes a long time

8 Increased participation = increased mobilisation Community mobilisation is most achieved when participation is maximised. How can the community participate most meaningfully in any given activity, and in every aspect of an organisation?

9 High participation = high sustainability & community control Increased participation means increased sustainability and high levels of community control Low sustainability and little community control: information giving, consultation (but without influence over decisions), participation for material incentives, being co-opted, selecting leaders High sustainability and high community control: decision making, community-led processes, learning together, initiating new activities, being involved in advocacy

10 Power and representation Who has the power? How can this power be shared more equally and fairly? Who is represented? Who is not here? Who is not represented? Why are they not here/represented? How can this be changed?

11 GIPA Greater Involvement of People Living with HIV/AIDS – 1994 Greater Investment in People Living with HIV/AIDS – 2008 The idea that participation must be meaningful and build skills and capacity Sustainability, community control, power

12 Some examples Treatment Action Campaign: South Africa The AIDS Service Organisation (TASO): Uganda Many of the organisations that make up the PSDN as well as the PSDN itself! … but community mobilisation can almost always go further, because opportunities for greater community mobilisation are everywhere!

13 Exercise 1: community mobilisation scenarios Read the scenario you are given and answer this question: How can community mobilisation be applied to this situation so that there is: Greater community participation? More meaningful community participation? Remember skills and capacity building, sustainability, community control, GIPA, power, representation etc.

14 Exercise 2: practical work Nominate an activity you have coming up or are planning (this can be anything from a small activity to a very large one). Briefly describe this activity. Devise a plan to: (1) involve greater numbers of community members in this activity (2) involve the community in more meaningful ways than is currently planned Remember skills and capacity building, sustainability, community control, GIPA, power, representation etc. Be creative and be practical!

15 Passing on what you’ve learnt in this session Do you want to put the plan you’ve just come up with into practice? How can you let others know about the work you’ve undertaken here? What support will you need to do this?

16 Some resources All Together Now, 2003, International HIV/AIDS Alliance - good information and heaps of practical tools that have been created in the field by communities in developing countries Involving Those Directly Affected in Health and Development Communication Programs – Participation Guide, 2007, Health Communication Partnership Both available at www.aidsalliance.org – search publications for community mobilisationwww.aidsalliance.org Also search community mobilisation on www.aidsmap.org www.aidsmap.org

17 Chinese proverb With the best leaders, when the work is done and the task accomplished, the people will say “we have done this ourselves”. - Lau Tzu


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