What do you need to do to get your issue on the agenda, adopted and mainstreamed. A practical checklist.

When you are working to bring about a policy change you’ll need different skills sets at different times of the getting the law/policy you want.

You’ll also need patience, persistence, and a long time horizon. It takes between  10-15 years from the conception of an idea to it being taken up in law and being mainstreamed. Few organizations or people  have this long term time horizon thinking.  It means you need the resources at hand for 10-15 years to deliver on your policy goals.

This model comes from thinking about my work for WWF on fisheries. I think the approach is applicable to NGOs and industry.

The real challenge of delivering this is that it requires often impassioned people to hand over their ‘baby’/’project’ to people with different skill sets at different times. The combination of skills of excellent campaigner, lobbyist, expert, lawyer, government official, and industry credibility is unlikely to exist in one person.

I suspect the psychological need for control/ownership  in one person – usually the issue expert –  throughout the long policy change journey is the main reason that both industry and NGOs deliver so little legislative change.

 

 

Stage 1: Get it on the agenda
Lead: Campaigners
What’s Needed
  • A compelling story
  • Evidence
  • Resources
Stage 2: Get it Tabled
Lead: Lobbyists and experts
What’s needed
  • A window of Opportunity
  • Right allies, at the right time and the right place
  • Legislative and policy solutions
Stage 3: Get it adopted
Lead: Lobbyists and campaigners
What’s Needed
  • Political support
  • Legislative and policy solutions
  • Credibility & Trust
Stage 4: Get it implemented/ Stop any backsliding
Lead: Lawyers, Experts, Industry
What’s Needed
  • Turnkey solutions
  • Peer validation
  • Fast-track implementing rules
Stage 5: Get it mainstreamed
Lead: Industry, government officials
What’s Needed
  • Work with the decision-makers to refine any bumps in the road
  • Show that opportunity cost of reversal is too high
  • Ensure a commercial case for the change

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