The four roles of activism
To prepare for the exercise, put some big sheets of paper on the wall, which will give you enough space to put several cards within each quadrant (each quadrant representing a role). Do not mark anything on the paper yet - for now, it should just be a blank sheet of paper.
To introduce the exercise, explain that you want to explore different kinds of activism within a movement, and not just among those present in the group/training exercise.
Brainstorming of characteristics/roles/functions
Begin the exercise with a brainstorming. Ask participants to name characteristics of people/activists within movements they have expierenced. You can give some examples such as "promoting (minor) reforms", or "being angry, a radical voice", or "educating people".
During the brainstorm, write participant's ideas on a card (one on each card) and place the card in the most relevant quadrant of the paper on the wall. You might want to ask clarifying questions if an idea is not clear. Don't get worried if things don't match exactly the characteristics of the four roles - most examples will fit somewhere. If you leave space on the paper for things that don't fit at all, you can put some items there. Some things might fit into several roles, then put them in one for now - you can mention that later. Things that fit with the inefficient way of playing a role go onto the outer side of the quadrant.
Once the brainstorm gets slower, and/or once there is enough on the paper to get you through the four roles, you can continue with the next step. Don't worry if there are important aspects missing - you can fill them in.
Explain the four roles of activism according to the Movement Action Plan
You now explain the four roles of activism according to the Movement Action Plan, making use of as many of the characteristics participants came up with as possible, and filling in important gaps (you can add some more cards to do so).
Mark the four quadrants on the paper on the wall now or while you explain the four roles, and write the name of each role in one of the corners.
In this process, you can also draw attention to the inefficient ways of playing a role.
ineffective |
effective | effective |
ineffective |
- or -
|
|
|
|
Citizen | Reformer | ||
Rebel | Social Change Agent | ||
|
|
|
|
ineffective |
effective |
effective |
ineffective |
Make clear that this model of four roles is a simplifaction. Most people will fit into several roles at once, or might move from one role to another during the course of their activism. The important aspect is that all roles (in their efficient way) need to be present in a movement to be successful, with different importance of different roles at the different phases of a movement.
Participants and their roles
To close this exercise, assign four corners of the room to a role each, and ask participants to position themselves to where they see themselves among these four extreme corners representing the four roles. Ask individual participants to volunteer to share with the group why the stand where they stand.
Evaluation
You can finish with a brief discussion, and the following questions can be useful:
- What do these four roles mean to us?
- What do they mean for our strategy?
- Do we need to have all the roles present in our group?
- How did I move through the roles during the course of my actisist life?