Campaign cases
Overview of featured cases
In the toolkit, we use 10 real world cases of campaigns or campaign-supporting initiatives that embraced a narrative change/reframing approach targeting the middle and aiming to change the public narrative on migration in a more progressive manner. This page provides a short overview of each.
A caveat - we are NOT presenting the cases as models to cut and paste, but more to learn practical lessons from. You may not like the focus or approach they take or they not suit you, your organisation or your context and that is ok. There is still a lot to learn from the choices made by each organisation through the process.
To challenge growing anti-Muslim sentiment, British Future developed a campaign called the ‘Poppy Hijab’, which commemorates the 400,000 Muslim soldiers who died fighting for Britain in World War 1. Launched around the centenary of World War 1 in 2014, they made a hijab featuring the commemorative poppy and launched it in the commonly migrant sceptical and right-wing newspaper, The Daily Telegraph, under the slogan “Proudly British – Proudly Muslim”.
A campaign built to support the planning application to establish a Muslim prayer centre by a small group of Muslims in the town of Shrewsbury in England in 2013. This group of Bangladeshis have been living in the town for many years and initially it looked as if the planning application would be denied from a county council led by conservatives. HOPE not hate made an appeal to the councillors using right to worship and decency frames and delivered by local Christian religious leaders. And the planning was successfully passed.
This toolkit is part of this project, but in addition to resources, we are also supporting the development of campaigns in a step-by-step manner and have structured this around the Narrative Change Campaign Planning Process. Therefore, there are lots of insights into the campaign development process that we draw on. For more of the project specifics, see the project page.
Two artists built a kitchen and dining room installation in three districts of Mannheim in Spring 2016. Passers-by were invited to sit and share rumours about migration that they heard and the artists ‘transformed’ the rumour into a dish, i.e. a visualisation of the rumour, which was served to the citizen. The experience was a basis for dialogue and exploring different narratives to counter the rumour.
This is a national campaign designed to support the integration of refugees in Germany. As part of the campaign, people can understand the refugee integration process, find local initiatives to get involved in and also showcases real life stories of ongoing integration processes. The appeal is to build on the refugees welcome momentum and the huge number of volunteers who got involved in 2015/16. There is a focus on humanising the experience of refugees and those helping them and reframing migrant sceptical narratives.
This is a campaign built around the Euro 2016 Football Tournament in which British Future asked people of all backgrounds to post photos of themselves supporting England with the hashtag #WeAreAllEngland and with the aim to “get people from all backgrounds in England to come together to celebrate our shared identity”. They also produced a video of kids from a Madrassa playing football and supporting England. The appeal is to a kind of low-bar patriotism & illustration of community affiliation/integration.
This is a guide for campaigners in the Welcoming America network on messaging to the middle on the refugee issue in the US. The messages they are putting forward is: Moving is normal for both migrants and US citizens, so allow them to work, contribute to their communities and become citizens. So the value appeals are: they do what we do (the moving), work ethic, contribution to the country and Integration that works.
This is a guide for campaigners in the Welcoming America network on messaging to the middle around migrants from Islamic backgrounds in the US. The messages they are putting forward is: Freedom of religion is a founding principle and now, people of all faiths need to unite and stand together with open heats and compassion in welcoming new arrivals. So the value appeals are: Freedom of religion, humanitarianism and compassion
A very in-depth piece of research which provides a frame map of the 2012/13 immigration reform debate in the US. They also extensively tested messages with the middle and recommend using the following messaging approach: Immigrants should be treated with compassion, but we need real solutions that offer a citizenship perspective, so that we can all benefit. So a clear focus on the values of humanitarianism, pragmatism and shared prosperity.
This is a piece of polling research to test a fairness frame with the UK public, i.e. ‘If migrants work hard, pay in to the system, and uphold British values, we should welcome them to the UK.’ And compare that to a long-term economic benefits of immigration message. The fairness message tests much better than the long-term economic benefits one. So the value focus is on fairness, hard work, contribution and Integration.