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Macro Practice (How? (Starting/funding agencies (Grants (Private, Public),…
Macro Practice
How?
Policy change
Starting/funding agencies
Grants
Private
Public
Sponsors
Fundraising
Administration
Prevent burnout
Self-care
Time management
Time logging
Avoiding procrastination
Donating
Means and ends: do what works
Voting
Organizing
Advocacy
Empowerment
Revolutions
Starts with the individual: work on self
Evaluations and assessments
PREPARE model
IMAGINE model
PERT charts
Evidence-based
Statistics
Research
Questionnaires
Surveys
Secondary
Primary
Qualitative
Quantitative
Empirical
Experimental
Those who came before
Tactics
Lobbying and petitioning
Campaigning
Who?
Those with power
Money
People
Influence
Types of power
Legitimate
Reward
Expert
Referent
Coercive
Change agents
Organizers
Cesar Chavez
Dolores Huerte
Jane Addams
Whitney Young Jr.
Saul Alinsky
Voters
Administrators
Politicians
Working with the media
Anyone can participate in macro practice
Stakeholders
Target system
Opposition
Bureaucrats
Radicals
Political parties
Republican
Democrat
Third parties
Community activists
Branches of government
What?
Agencies
Politics
State
Local
Federal
Finances
Legalities
Marketing
PR
Organizing
Service projects
Person in environment
Redistribution of power
Education
Public health
Setting and reaching goals
Working with systems
Where?
Agencies
Local government
State government
Federal government
Non-profits
Administration
Charities
International
Communities
Physical
Non-physical
Organizations
Online
Economics
Why?
Ethically obligated under NASW code
Policies have great impacts on vulnerable populations
Can make big changes for the better
Strength in numbers
Give back to the community
Ensure human rights
Whoever controls the narrative controls the power
When?
Elections
Always
Meetings
Town halls
Local politics
Agendas
Selective subjects and participants
Clear objectives
Community engagement
Sponsoring legislation