KAPOOKABABY

Is it better to ask citizens to stop bad behaviors or start positive ones?

Yesterday I talked about ‘positive vs. negative messaging‘ in activism, but today I want to talk about something I’m not exactly sure the terms of. But for now I’ll just name it ‘start campaigning’ and ‘stop campaigning’.

‘Stop campaigning’ is all about asking people to stop or reduce how much they do something. ‘Start campaigning’, as you can guess, is all about asking people to start doing something. I’ll use a few examples to illustrate:

Australia has one of the highest rates of skin cancer incidence in the world, and accordingly also an ongoing skin cancer awareness campaign for over thirty years now. Back when I was a kid in the 80s SunSmart Australia had a super-catchy decade long campaign with the line “Slip! Slop! Slap!”. Even now I can remember what those three words meant – slip on a shirt, slop on some sunscreen, slap on a hat. It’s a great example of ‘start campaigning’. Thanks to this successful campaign Aussies around the country started wearing sunscreen, hats and other protective gear.

According to the SunSmart site, “as the public became more aware of the Slip! Slop! Slap! message, SunSmart began to focus on telling people how they can reduce their skin cancer risk and how to identify changes to their own skin that may be a sign of skin cancers.”

And one of their most recent television ads is a good example of ‘stop campaigning’, with the message being ‘stop tanning because it’s unsafe’.

The environmental movement is a big fan of ‘stop campaigning’. The entire simple living movement is all about reducing one’s possessions, ecological footprint, energy usage etc. While it’s a message that works well with people who feel overwhelmed by modern day materialism and conspicuous consumption, there’s also the danger you’ll come off as a kill-joy.

Recently Emily and I launched ‘The Winter B-icicle Challenge‘, in which we encourage citizens around the world to bike to work or school every day throughout winter. We’ve employed ‘start campaigning’ and I guess the ‘stop campaigning’ equivalent would be World Carfree Day which asks drivers on September 22 to leave their vehicles at home.

While both the ‘Winter B-icicle Challenge’ and ‘World Carfree Day’ have similar goals: stop climate change by reducing the number of CO2 emitting cars on the road, the methods in which we achieve that goal is different. Our ‘start campaign’, I believe, is more fun, and much easier to create content or engagement with the challengers. But at the same time, it’s very specific (we exclude those who might walk or catch public transport) and the environmental messaging isn’t as clear as ‘World Carfree Day’.

In the end, as was the case with the SunSmart campaigns, you need both. You need people to reduce harmful activities (and know why they need to reduce) but they also need to be informed and encouraged to take up positive alternatives.


Born-again hippie

Winter B-icicle Challenge

I recently tweeted:

Starting at Greenpeace basically made complete my transformation into a complete commie, hippie, left-leaning bastard.

For a long time now, I – as so many do – have been searching for something bigger. A cause, a reason to live and work, something that I could disappear into, like an amoeba. Lose shape and colour, and fold amorphously into the form of another, larger cloud.

I wouldn’t have to think or decide anymore. It would give me all the answers. Everything would become singular and crystal clear. Absolute salvation.

Over the years I’ve flirted with different causes and different ideas. If you put all my blog posts on a chart you could probably map out, with total accuracy, my conversion from vapid, pop-culture junkie and hipster party girl, to activist (not that the former has completely left me).

I love Greenpeace, and I think the work we do is so important, but working there hasn’t meant I’ve lost all body and form. Because I’ve realised I should never have searched for one cause, or one organization. What I was looking for, and what I have found, and what I can credit Greenpeace for having made my search complete, is an identity.

I am an activist. And an activist need not be restricted to one fight. An activist is an environmentalist today, and a feminist tomorrow. An activist is led by values, rather than causes. An activist is a hopeless idealist, with a brilliant vision of the world she wants to live in, and then acts every day, and with every step, in accordance to that ideal. For an activist, every act, no matter how mundane, is an act of creation.

And with that, I want to introduce you to Lane Change, a new non-profit bike advocacy group I’ve started with my mate Emily D’Ath. Our first activity is the ‘Winter B-Icicle Challenge’ in which we encourage all northern hemisphere folk to ride all throughout winter. Sign-up!