• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Working with Joe

Coaching and mediation

  • BID WRITING
  • CONTENT DESIGN
  • BID WRITING EBOOK
  • CONTACT

The A Team Guide to Advocacy

By Joe Roberson

Maybe you can hire an Advocate

Maybe you’ve never noticed it before but the A Team bear a surprising resemblance to a team of advocates. There’s a good reason for this. If you remember, they started out in 1972 before advocacy as a movement had got going. They hung around for a long time, doing a lot of good work, touching people’s lives and inspiring thousands throughout the 1980s.

So it’s no coincidence that by the time they went off air in 1987 the advocacy movement had tentatively spread its wings and taken flight. It was on the move. Fair to say we owe a lot of our roots to Hannibal and the boys.

Let’s examine in more detail just how much the A Team inspired advocacy as we know it…

The A Team were sent to prison for a crime they didn’t commit. But they escaped.

They used self advocacy to break free. They empowered themselves. They believed in rights and social justice and weren’t afraid to claim it for themselves.

They survive as soldiers of fortune

They do what’s right and they don’t charge for it. Their moral compass is strong and their ethics beyond reproach. Sure their methods may be a little risqué or unconventional, but their results speak for themselves.

If you have a problem

They love problems and so does advocacy. For both it is their raison d’etre. Without problems neither the A Team nor advocacy are needed. Advocacy and the A Team are at their best when dealing with a tricky issue, especially those caused by systems that fail to treat people as individuals. We both love it when a plan comes together.

And if no one else can help

You’ve tried all the other options? So had the people who needed the A Team’s help. Advocacy is typically (though need not always be) what people turn to when all else fails. We know it should be promoted better but it’s still a little bit of a last resort (just like drugging BA Baracus to get him on a plane).

And if you can find ‘em

It’s getting easier but just like the A Team, advocates can still be rather hard to find. Unless you fit specific criteria you may not get one. Sure, this isn’t always the case and advocacy isn’t exactly the best at blowing its own trumpet, but you’ve still got to understand what it is, work out that you want it, and then find an advocate.

Maybe you can hire the A Team

You can. And they won’t charge you. And they’ll back off and leave you alone when the job’s done. Just like good advocates do.

Are you convinced now? All hail our advocacy forefathers.

Disclaimer: It should probably be noted that the A Team’s approach to helping get people out of (or in to) psychiatric units has been extensively overhauled and redeveloped by advocates. Rather than busting them out a la Murdock style, advocates use more gentle means…

Filed Under: Advocacy

Primary Sidebar

POSTS

  • The Starwars Guide to Bid Writing
  • 3 Reasons Even Great Grant Funding Bids Fail (and what to do about it)
  • 7 Smart Ways to Improve Your Next Grant Funding Bid That Anyone Can Use
  • What Sir Arthur Conan Doyle Can Teach Us About Building a Tech for Good Product
  • 4 Reasons Why Human Centred Design Trumps User Participation
  • The Only Way You Should Ever Begin Your Funding Bid
  • The Secret Method for Selling Your Tech for Good Product
  • 7 steps to ease the pain of bid writing
  • 3 things I did to create an award-winning tech for good startup
  • How To Fund And Deliver Social Tech ~ Free Ebook
  • How to use tech to unleash marginalised young people’s potential
  • Six insider tips for creating digital tools that solve social problems
  • Four things I learnt about user involvement at Innovation Labs
  • 22 Ways to Create Compelling Content (Infographic)
  • The A Team Guide to Advocacy
  • Top Ten Reasons for Advocates to be Social Media Literate