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Building the environment for change: social movements

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Building the environment for change: social movements

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Slides from the talk that Helen Bevan gave at the Thames Valley Strategic Clinical Network and Clinical Senate conference, 17th January 2017

Slides from the talk that Helen Bevan gave at the Thames Valley Strategic Clinical Network and Clinical Senate conference, 17th January 2017

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Building the environment for change: social movements

  1. 1. Building the environment for change: social movements Helen Bevan @HelenBevan
  2. 2. @HelenBevan
  3. 3. @HelenBevan
  4. 4. @HelenBevan Using social movement principles
  5. 5. @HelenBevan Jeremy Heimens TED talk “What new power looks like” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-S03JfgHEA old power new power Currency Held by a few Pushed down Commanded Closed Transaction Current Made by many Pulled in Shared Open Relationship
  6. 6. @HelenBevan
  7. 7. @HelenBevan “Tomorrow’s management systems will need to value diversity, dissent and divergence as highly as conformance, consensus and cohesion.” Gary Hamel Image by neilperkin.typepad.com is the new normal!
  8. 8. @HelenBevan “Tomorrow’s management systems will need to value diversity, dissent and divergence as highly as conformance, consensus and cohesion.” Gary HamelImage by neilperkin.typepad.com “The single biggest mistake to avoid (in seeking disruptive change)? Creating disruption at work. Focus on developing relationships, not disrupting and alienating people. Peter Vander Awera is the new normal! #
  9. 9. @HelenBevan WHO will make the change happen? Source: adapted by Helen Bevan from Leandro Herrera List A • The STP Transformation Programme Board [or equivalent] • The programme sponsors • The Programme Management Office • The [insert number] STP transformation work streams • The Clinical Leads of workstreams • The Directors of participating organisations • The Change Facilitators
  10. 10. @HelenBevan WHO will make the change happen? List A • The STP Transformation Programme Board [or equivalent] • The programme sponsors • The Programme Management Office • The [insert number] STP transformation work streams • The Clinical Leads of workstreams • The Directors of participating organisations • The Change Facilitators List B • The mavericks and rebels • The deviants (positive). Who do things differently and succeed • The contrarians, because they can • The nonconformists who see things through glasses no one else has • The hyper-connected. Good or bad, they spread behaviours, role model at a scale, set mountains on fire and multiply anything they get their hands on • The hyper-trusted. Multiple reasons, doesn’t matter which ones Source: adapted by Helen Bevan from Leandro Herrera
  11. 11. @HelenBevan WHO will make the change happen? List B • The mavericks and rebels • The deviants (positive). Who do things differently and succeed • The contrarians, because they can • The nonconformists who see things through glasses no one else has • The hyper-connected. Good or bad, they spread behaviours, role model at a scale, set mountains on fire and multiply anything they get their hands on • The hyper-trusted. Multiple reasons, doesn’t matter which ones Source: adapted by Helen Bevan from Leandro Herrera List A • The STP Transformation Programme Board [or equivalent] • The programme sponsors • The Programme Management Office • The [insert number] STP transformation work streams • The Clinical Leads of workstreams • The Directors of participating organisations • The Change Facilitators
  12. 12. @HelenBevan What’s the evidence? The failure of large scale transformational change projects is rarely due to the content or structure of the plans that are put into action To make transformational change happen we need to connect networks of people who ‘want’ to contribute http://iedp.com/articles/vertical-leadership/?utm_source=Sign-Up.to&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=13787- 257163-Campaign+-+01%2F09%2F2016 Source: David Dinwoodie (2015) It’s much more about the role of informal networks in the organisations and systems affected by change
  13. 13. @HelenBevan Which kind of activists are most successful at delivering change? Lone wolves Build power by expertise and information — through advocacy, oversight, contributing to committees, public comments and other forms of consultation Source: Hahrie Han How Organizations Develop Activists: Civic Associations and Leadership in the 21st Century
  14. 14. @HelenBevan Patient leaders as “lone wolves” “What I am ranting about is the way in which patients are being streamed into advisory sub committees, the way we are being used as tokens and to help tick off the right box….. Where is the attitude that patients are part of the team in healthcare, that we are partners? Why are we always asked to participate inside a pre-determined frame? When will we see co-design of new policies, and ultimately co-production?” Annette McKinnon
  15. 15. @HelenBevan Which kind of activists are most successful at delivering change? Lone wolves Build power by expertise and information — through advocacy, oversight, contributing to committees, public comments and other forms of consultation Mobilisers Build power by mobilising people – being able to call on large numbers of people to contribute, engage in change and take action Source: Hahrie Han How Organizations Develop Activists: Civic Associations and Leadership in the 21st Century
  16. 16. @HelenBevan Which kind of activists are most successful at delivering change? Lone wolves Build power by expertise and information — through advocacy, oversight, contributing to committees, public comments and other forms of consultation Mobilisers Build power by mobilising people – being able to call on large numbers of people to contribute, engage in change and take action Organisers Build power by growing leaders – identifying, recruiting and training future leaders in a distributed network: building a community and protecting its strength Source: Hahrie Han How Organizations Develop Activists: Civic Associations and Leadership in the 21st Century
  17. 17. @HelenBevan Which kind of activists are most successful at delivering change? Lone wolves Build power by expertise and information — through advocacy, oversight, contributing to committees, public comments and other forms of consultation Mobilisers Build power by mobilising people – being able to call on large numbers of people to contribute, engage in change and take action Organisers Build power by growing leaders – identifying, recruiting and training future leaders in a distributed network: building a community and protecting its strength Source: Hahrie Han How Organizations Develop Activists: Civic Associations and Leadership in the 21st Century
  18. 18. @HelenBevan Which kind of activists are most successful at delivering change? Lone wolves Build power by expertise and information — through advocacy, oversight, contributing to committees, public comments and other forms of consultation Mobilisers Build power by mobilising people – being able to call on large numbers of people to contribute, engage in change and take action Organisers Build power by growing leaders – identifying, recruiting and training future leaders in a distributed network: building a community and protecting its strength Source: Hahrie Han How Organizations Develop Activists: Civic Associations and Leadership in the 21st Century
  19. 19. @HelenBevan Focus on the “We” “Great social movements get their energy by growing a distributed leadership” Joe Simpson
  20. 20. @HelenBevan Copyright: <a href='http://www.123rf.com/profile_iqoncept'>iqoncept / 123RF Stock Photo</a> Beyond top down and bottom up change……. Beyond the service lens through which systems leaders typically conceive the problems we’re trying to solve…. Bringing positive disruption into the system for faster change & bigger outcomes Disruptive co-creation Adapted from SOLACE

Editor's Notes

  • Examples form the NHS of social movements often called a call to action

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