Advocacy

Yuleng Zeng

23 January, 2020

Reading 1

What is advocacy?

Three aspects of social advocacy

source: dogooder.

Is there such a thing as social justice?

The above definition of social advocacy is predicated upon social justice. But not all people believe it is still relevant today. Watch this clip by PragerU on social justice and discuss.

Or is there not?

Reading 2

What are the topics that you would like to advocate for?

Discussion of Speech 1: Imagining Advocacy by Articulating the Problem

Discussion of Speech 1 (cont.): Content

Discussion of Speech 1 (cont.): Formal/Structural/Presentation Considerations

Examples

Now we wll go over some topics that could be of interest to you. Again, you shouldn’t just randomly pick a topic. Instead, pick something you are passionate about.

Examples

Note that the goal is not just picking an issue. But to think also about ethics, i.e. what do you think is the right or wrong?

Additional examples

Additional resources on human rights.

Reading 3: Rhetorical situation

How does advocacy work in the U.S.?

Advocacy aims to change public opinion and social policy. Therefore, social advocates aim at both directly changing policy makers’ opinions and indirectly shaping the public’s.

Fundamental values

How public opinions are formed?

Additional resources

further readings: Boundless Political Science: Public Opinion.

In-class activity

Let us try the civic tests

Interest groups

Political Action Committees (PACs)

Inside and outside lobbying.

Conspiracy theory

Impeachment update

BBC

Moral