Original image: Christian Keenan/Getty Images // Edited by: Mindworks

While the corona crisis presents an opportunity for the civil society organizations, activists, and other change-makers to create deep system change, it is difficult to know where to start and how to do this. Let’s be honest, we are all confused. We at Mindworks wrote this article as an inspiration piece for our colleagues at Greenpeace, but we hope it can help other practitioners with this process too. We present seven ideas — each a recommendation for where and how attention and resources can be directed.

IDEA 1: Research-inspired orientation will help us and others to regain agency.

In the 1970s, John Boyd developed a new combat strategy, which today is used not only by armed forces but also by businesses — The OODA loop concept.

John Boyd’s OODA Loop Diagram visualized by Business Insider.

In a crisis, According to Boyd, in order to make decisions and take actions, it is important for everyone to be able to orient — to create an understanding of the relevant parts of the world. We do this by observing the environment around us and the unfolding circumstances and attributing meaning to them. If these are changing, people get stuck in the orientation phase — they cannot take decisions, and they lose agency. Even more, being caught in the state of disorientation, people become anxious and are prone to make things up or believe falsehoods, eager to make sense of the world.

In a crisis, orientation becomes very difficult because we can take fewer past observations for granted. As multiple secondary crises (for example loss of work, psychological stress because of confinement or fear, loss of access to essential services, police violence) affect our lives, we cannot base our orientation on pure intuition or an understanding of what is normal.

Orientation is even further derailed as a lot of what we read today are anecdotes, opinions, speculations and access to data is still very limited. Desperate to emerge from this state, we suck up all information we can find printed and broadcasted, ready to form our opinions on the basis of other opinions and anecdotes, the latter often reflecting the extremes of the really bad and really good things that happen. And we tend to stay in our bubble, reaffirm our beliefs and run the risk to become delusional. Since orientation becomes an essential objective throughout the crisis, what can our role in it be?

We can use data to enter the wider debate and become a credible and trustworthy voice. A good example is the air pollution figures in China that the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air compiled in the early days of the crisis. This research can be made available for different stakeholders and audiences including raw data for other researchers to analyse, reports for decision-makers, and infographics and news reports for our supporters and citizens to support their orientation. Turning research into outputs allows for spending more resources on it and it opens opportunities to apply for third party funding for such projects. Supporting the orientation of multiple audiences is also in line with the objective to increase societal agency and reduce anxiety.

Here are some further recommendations for how to design such research projects:

  1. Research needs to be fast, the compilation and analysis of data need to happen in a few days, as the environment is constantly shifting.
  2. Research should aim to be representative, therefore quantitative — or at least semi-quantitative — and not only qualitative.
  3. Monitoring tools that compile data constantly over time to identify trends are better than snapshots in a shifting environment.
  4. Analytics can be enhanced by compiling information that can be compared. For example comparing geographies, governments and different societal demographics.
  5. Data displays should be audience-specific and made very easy for the general public to digest and orient; formats should resemble more consumer guides rather than long analytic essays.

Some examples of such research are:

  1. Ranking of stimulus packages by country.
  2. Assessment of emergency legislation from the human rights perspective per country.
  3. Audience research to establish levels of resilience (see Idea 3).
  4. Audience research to identify the narratives developing in the minds of people (see Idea 4).
  5. Quantify actions and exposure to actions of solidarity versus actions and exposure to actions of aggression.

One more thing: monitoring the development of narratives connected to the crisis could be particularly useful as those will determine the mindset changes being triggered by the crisis, and thus indicate what changes (of behaviour, policy etc.) will be accepted in the future.

IDEA 2: Only those who appear empathetic and courageous will be heard now.

If we don’t temporarily change the subject and the narratives of our campaign messages, we run the risk of coming across as lacking empathy and being disconnected from the real problems of the world. We can, however, use this time to be there for our audiences, and, in the meantime, to build our expertise in areas that will matter the most later (see Idea 3).

One way of being there for our audiences is to tap more into the emotional aspects of this crisis and to create initiatives that help our audiences to work through their emotions. Particularly, initiatives that deal with the capacity of coping with uncertain times and adaptation can help us to build bridges to our future campaigns, being a central topic in climate campaigning. We could even show more of our own vulnerabilities (for example expressing in online video posts the anxieties we’re feeling by being in such a space of uncertainty), leading the way for our audiences. By working with emotions during this crisis, we can train more the skill of taking them into account when campaigning in the future, particularly since dissolving difficult emotions can help trigger action. Mindworks has created an Emotions Tool, for example, that can help create audience-centric campaigns that provoke difficult emotions.

The acute health crisis has provoked creativity and spread of multiple citizen actions often to support the vulnerable. Experience as a provider or receiver of such actions will shape people’s values and narratives about the virus and could trigger spillover effects into other actions of citizen involvement in the future. By facilitating the creation and spread of acts of courage, we not only provide a platform that helps build agency in our audiences, but we also help people to rediscover meaning when past actions look questionable (see more under Idea 6).

IDEA 3: Only those who understand safety and resilience will be heard when shaping the future.

One of the most probable outcomes of this crisis is that people will be left feeling vulnerable. Thus changes to the existing systems will be driven by our desire for safety. Among the experts deciding the post-corona futures, this will translate into discussions about the resilience of economic, political, and societal systems. In order to be heard by audiences beyond the environmentalist circles, it will be imperative to enhance our know-how on safety and resilience, develop ideas and research, and start publishing this information as soon as possible. This not only allows us to become an important player but can also generate possible alternatives to authoritarian-based solutions; solutions that increase control and surveillance and decrease civil rights.

Initial research in this area should focus on revealing fragilities the systems expose in the crisis. This research could be combined with the audience research mentioned under Idea 1. It must be stressed here that it is important to emphasize your position on the research, so you are not just adding to the flood of opinion pieces. We should also resist the temptation to try to find answers for all systems and to develop holistic visions (see also Idea 6).

Mindworks has successfully started to facilitate resilience workshops with climate student initiative around the world using the emotional experiences in the coronavirus crisis as an entry point to move from feeling to coping, to empathy and then to action.

IDEA 4: Create such narratives that allow for a change in the future.

Crises have the ability to dramatically change mindsets. The narratives that are created during the crisis and that prevail after the crisis, will determine how deeply, and in which direction, mindsets will shift. Different narratives that evolve within societies could create more polarization, and fear-based narratives could become even more dominant and influential in our thinking. The stories we tell ourselves and each other about the crisis will determine our actions in the future. If we can shape and reiterate a few key narratives right now that people will adopt as their memories and emotions of the crisis, then we can shape the support for the desired action in the future.

Here are some narratives that could help create the fundamental and positive system changes post-crisis:

  1. The coronavirus crisis is an excellent example of intergenerational solidarity. Although young people had little to fear from the virus, they accepted major constraints to their personal lifestyle, their economic situation and their social relations so that they could help protect the older generations and vulnerable people. Fostering a narrative of intergenerational solidarity will be essential to solving the climate crisis.
  2. The crisis will change everything. This is an important narrative to make so that people can expect substantive changes in the aftermath of the crisis and thus build their acceptance of this (It is important to note here though, that this narrative will not determine a preference for a particular change of direction.).
  3. We are able to push through a crisis if we stick together.

In contrast, we do not think that the narratives ‘See? Change is possible!’, ‘Governments can take fast decisive action’ or ‘People can radically change their behaviour!’ are useful. This is because most people’s experiences of the changes are/will be negative and they only find them acceptable because they perceive them as temporary. Also, these narratives can be easily connected to the ‘But for what price..?’ narrative.

IDEA 5: Being the Watchdog — Sound the alarm when things go wrong.

Another role we can play in this crisis is that of a watchdog. In the Fukushima Crisis, Greenpeace Japan became the ‘monitor of the monitors’ because they could provide relevant analytical data. The corona crisis offers other areas where we can provide data and analysis to highlight certain dangers, injustices and lies. Examples are:

  1. Rate and rank stimulus packages,
  2. Expose lies, fear-mongering and propaganda on social media.
  3. We can scandalize corporate lobbying and authoritarian power grabs.

To be a watchdog, we need to establish systems that record primary data and detect scandals. Additionally, we can lend our voices to others who are also promoting scandals, including supporting systems for whistleblowers (see also Idea 7).

IDEA 6: Create unusual conversations and connections.

The crisis provides opportunities to engage people in conversations who would usually have little reason to talk to each other. For now, we have the perception that we share a common story (although stories actually are strongly divided between economic classes); we are facing a common enemy (the virus), and the discriminating, value-based narratives to explain the crisis (for example this virus has been invented by the Americans, the Chinese or Muslims) has not yet spread that far. This allows us to engage with different value groups and milieus in shared conversations about their experiences, feelings and ideas about how to create the world of tomorrow. These conversations (and shared experiences, in the broader sense) can range from Hackathons of thousands of people, virtual citizen assemblies, to cross-community Zoom labs. These conversations can reduce polarisation and provide ways to facilitate shared solutions. If we focus more of our efforts on listening to audiences and then creating conversations based on what we’ve learnt, we can then explore and test different communication and engagement ideas.

IDEA 7: Internet fairies to fight trolls.

People in fear and disorientation are easy targets for trolls. As much as this crisis can change mindsets for the good, it can also forge negative mindsets. Even if we manage to observe published materials outside our own bubble, a large number of conversations on the internet are hidden. The 2019/2020 Australian extreme bushfires event showed just how the online public discourse can be shaped by trolls. Troll campaigns often stay invisible until the damage is done. Such campaigns targeting crisis-affected, volatile and fragile audiences can create huge damage. It is, therefore, necessary that civil society advances its capacity to spot and identify such trolling. We can either help create, support or collaborate with internet fairies so that they can enter relevant conversations and counteract the trolls’ actions, by opening spaces for conversations similar to those listed under Idea 6, and support the creation of narratives mentioned in Ideas 3 and 4.