Take Action

Effective civic engagement is based on research, not impulse. Learn the proven methods that create real change while keeping you and your community safe.

Evidence-Based Engagement

The methods on this page are based on decades of academic research into what actually works in civic movements. Effective action is strategic, sustained, and nonviolent.

The Science of Effective Movements

Harvard researcher Erica Chenoweth studied over 300 campaigns from 1900-2006 and found clear patterns in what makes movements succeed. The key factors aren't passion or righteousness — they're strategy, broad participation, and nonviolent discipline.

Participation Matters More Than Tactics

Large, diverse participation is the strongest predictor of success. Movements succeed when they attract people who wouldn't normally consider themselves activists — moderates, professionals, older people, and those from varied backgrounds.

Nonviolence Builds Broader Coalitions

Violence shrinks movements by raising barriers to participation. Most people won't join something that puts them at physical or legal risk. Nonviolent movements attract more participants and maintain moral authority.

Sustained Pressure Beats Single Events

One march or one viral moment rarely changes anything. Successful movements maintain pressure over months and years through varied tactics — protests, boycotts, lobbying, elections, and daily actions.

Defections from Power Matter

Movements succeed when they convince members of the existing power structure — security forces, bureaucrats, business leaders — to stop supporting the status quo. Nonviolent discipline makes these defections more likely.

Principles of Effective Advocacy

Be Specific

Vague complaints are easy to ignore. Focus on specific policies, bills, or actions. "Vote no on HB 1234" is more effective than "protect our rights."

Be Persistent

One call matters. Repeated engagement over time matters more. Build relationships with staffers and show up consistently at town halls and meetings.

Be Local

Local elected officials are often more responsive than national ones. School boards, city councils, and state legislators can have enormous impact on daily life.

Build Coalitions

Diverse coalitions are more powerful. Work with people who share your goals, even if you disagree on other issues. Movements succeed when they expand.

Staying Safe

At Public Events:

  • Know your exits and have a buddy
  • Keep your phone charged
  • Bring water and any necessary medications
  • Write emergency contacts on your arm
  • Know the legal observer hotline

Digital Security:

  • Use encrypted messaging (Signal)
  • Disable facial recognition unlock at protests
  • Consider a burner phone for sensitive activities
  • Be mindful of what you post online
  • Review your privacy settings regularly

Further Reading