Coalition-building, Activating local leaders
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Building collaborative partnerships to develop a Local Housing Board

In Cebu City, more than 70% of the population is classified as urban poor. A group of Non-Government Organizations with programs and services for the urban poor organizations bonded together and worked with urban poor groups to create an alliance, Task Force Tawhanong Pagpuyo (TFT), to respond to the growing numbers of victims who experienced evictions and demolitions of their houses. TFT presented and advocated for alternatives to government development plans that involved wholesale demolition with no alternative relocation sites. TFT organized a conference of urban poor leaders to identify issues and alternative solutions and followed this with research and case studies. These materials were presented to the local government and housing agencies.  Simultaneously, training was conducted for judges who issue the demolition and eviction orders. The alliance succeeded in developing and getting representatives on to a local housing board and assisted in preparing a comprehensive shelter plan for the city.  As a result, guidelines for demolition and eviction were adopted and judges now coordinate with the local housing board to ensure compliance. The number of demolitions and evictions was substantially reduced and when they did occur, relocation sites were identified in advance.

Using petitions to gain public support for a government peace process

Through a drive that encouraged citizens of all political persuasions to sign a petition, the Basque peace group, Elkarri, gave citizens a way to collectively and effectively pressure the Spanish and Basque governments to initiate a peace dialogue.

For a detailed exploration of this tactic, please click on the following link to consult our tactical notebook, <b><a href="http://www.newtactics.org/en/SocietyasMediator">Society as Mediator for Conflict Resolution</a></b> by Tamara Muruetagoiena.

Using a right to food framework to influence investment decisions and operations of financial institutions

FoodFirst Information and Action Network International (FIAN) uses a human rights based approach to confront investors with the negative impacts and human rights violations caused by companies with loans or equity investment by the investors. The tactic is especially used in a campaign on violations of the right to food by large surface gold mines. The goal of the tactic is either to prevent investments in new mines or to mitigate the impacts of existing mines.

For a detailed exploration of this tactic, please click on the following link to consult our tactical notebook, <b><a href="http://www.newtactics.org/en/LeveragingtheMoney">Leveraging the Money</a></b> by Ulrich Mueller.

Organizing caravans to overcome militarization

Ruta Pacifica, a feminist, pacifist, anti-military organization, organizes caravans of thousands of women in Colombia to visit regions hardest-hit by the war. The caravans serve as a way for women from different areas to come together in support against the conflict, exchange ideas, and fight for an end to human rights abuses. When the women arrive in the war-torn areas, they will often instigate marches, rallies, or community discussions about the effects of the war. A caravan to the Putumayo region consisted of 100 buses carrying 3,000 women who marched with community members against the war. The group and the women thoroughly document and evaluate each action both for the media and for their own assessment. The organization includes the women in the training and planning for each caravan to ensure their knowledge, protection, and to emphasize their purpose and ideology.  Because many roads to the regions are blocked by armed groups and there are significant risks associated with traveling, the organization plans all stages of the action, considers all possible risks and creates an emergency plan to address the risks. Through the caravans, the members have a better understanding of what it means to be a pacifist and feminist, and have created a strong network of international connections.

For a detailed exploration of this tactic, please click on the following link to consult our tactical notebook, <b><a href="http://www.newtactics.org/en/WomenMakingPeace
">Women Making Peace: Mobilizing Ourselves Against the War</a></b> by Amanda Lucia Camilo Ibarra.

Using peoples platforms where citizens can publicly challenge officials on the difference between promises and reality

Mazdoor Kisan Shakti Sangathan (MKSS) organizes public hearings in India where acts of corruption, such as the embezzlement of funds dedicated to development projects, are exposed through a comparison of official records with what is actually on the ground and what is reported by the attending villagers.  MKSS activists conduct investigations into allegations of corruption in a particular village or district, often on the request of local residents who feel they have been cheated or abused. They submit a request, at the village council or at higher levels of government, for copies of the relevant official records. Once obtained, the accounts are cross-checked through site visits and interviews and discussions with villagers.  MKSS then holds public hearings that are attended by hundreds of villagers, as well as the press, government officials and those suspected of corruption.  This creates public pressure for investigations or compensation.
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