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By: Jesse J. Chatmon Ph.D. MCSE CNA Mental Health Consumer Mississippi Leadership Graduate

Advocacy and Rights: History and Practice. By: Jesse J. Chatmon Ph.D. MCSE CNA Mental Health Consumer Mississippi Leadership Graduate. Peer Advocacy Movement Grew out of Struggle for Rights and Empowerment. Mid-20 th -century organizing efforts include:.

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By: Jesse J. Chatmon Ph.D. MCSE CNA Mental Health Consumer Mississippi Leadership Graduate

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  1. Advocacy and Rights: History and Practice By: Jesse J. Chatmon Ph.D. MCSE CNA Mental Health Consumer Mississippi Leadership Graduate

  2. Peer Advocacy Movement Grew out of Struggle for Rights and Empowerment

  3. Mid-20th-century organizing efforts include: • WANA (We Are Not Alone) (1940s): • People released from psychiatric hospitals • Came together for mutual support • Founded Fountain House in NYC • Created clubhouse model

  4. Civil Rights Movement Sparked Peer Advocacy Movement “Those who profess to favor freedom, and yet deprecate agitation, are men who want crops without plowing the ground.” --Frederick Douglass (1817-1895) Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. (center) with others at the March on Washington, August 1963

  5. “Is this America?” • “We didn’t come all this way for no two seats when all of us is tired.” • – Mrs. Fannie Lou Hamer (1917-1977) testifying before the Credentials Committee at the 1964 Democratic National Convention

  6. It is important to go beyond self-help and mutual support to systems advocacy. -- Frank Riessman (1924-2004), a founder of the self-help movement Movement Roots Are in General Self-help Movement (AA, etc.) Frank Riessman

  7. Movement Values • Control • Choice • Self-determination • Empowerment • Recovery • “We want as full as possible control over our own lives. Is that too much to ask?” • –Howie the Harp • – • Howie the Harp • (1953-1995)

  8. Ex-patients’ Rights Groups Form in 1970s Judi Chamberlin Sally Zinman Jay Mahler Ed Knight Leonard Roy Frank Some early movement leaders around the US (Mass., Calif., N.Y., Fla., Ore.) George Ebert Sally Clay Dan Fisher David Oaks

  9. Organized self-help and advocacy groups Project SHARE founded 1984 Early demonstrations include civil disobedience outside Philadelphia Public Housing Authority to protest announcement of discriminatory policies (1985)

  10. Demonstrations May Be Successful • “Chain-in” at Philadelphia Housing Authority (1985) • Sleepout at State Office Building (1987) • Demonstrations sometimes only raise consciousness, create solidarity • Arrests at Federal Office Building (1988) Joseph Rogers

  11. Charlie King HikmahGardiner Alternatives ’90 rally to combat discrimination and stigma, organized by National Mental Health Consumers’ Self-Help Clearinghouse

  12. Project SHARE demonstrates outside APA annual meeting in Philadelphia, May 25, 1994. Above, Joseph Rogers and Carmen Colon. At right, Johnathan Evans.

  13. Movement evolves, gains power • “A seat at the table” • Serving on boards and committees • Closing state hospitals • Legislative advocacy • Support on federal level Neal Brown (right) and Jackie Parrish of the federal Community Support Programs Branch, now part of SAMHSA, helped the movement gain financial support.

  14. Whitfield State Hospital

  15. President George H.W. Bush signs ADA (1990), with Justin Dart at right.

  16. Decades Spent Convincing Establishment of Peer Support’s Value • Presenting at conferences • Attending meetings of professionals and administrators • Serving on boards and committees • Writing and publishing articles 1993 sit-in in then-CMHS director Dr. Bernard Arons’ office led to more funding for consumer-run programs. Former SAMHSA administrator Charles Curie previously headed OMHSAS of PA; supported recovery movement, fought use of S&R

  17. Paradigm shift: Establishment believes in recovery and accepts value of peer support • “Mental Health: A Report of the Surgeon General” (1999) • Report of the President’s New Freedom Commission on Mental Health (2003) Michael F. Hogan, Chair, President’s New Freedom Commission Then-U.S. Surgeon General David Satcher

  18. “Powers-that-be” realize that recovery-oriented, peer-run services are key to recovery SAMHSA recognizes Peer Support as one of the 10 fundamental components of recovery. The ten are: • Strengths-Based • Peer Support • Respect • Responsibility • Hope • Self-Direction • Individualized and Person-Centered • Empowerment • Holistic • Non-Linear SAMHSA Administrator Terry Cline (top); CMHS Director A. Kathryn Power (bottom)

  19. To motivate people: • Make it easy for people to get involved. • Create a sense of purpose. • Define clear and specific goals: • . . . that are achievable in a reasonable time period. • . . . whose achievement will improve people’s lives. • Give people responsibility.

  20. Make it fun! • “A good tactic is one that your people enjoy.” --Saul Alinsky Saul Alinsky (1909-1972)

  21. Be ready to negotiate • Study the offer. • Don’t accept an initially offered solution too quickly. • It may be designed to appease rather than create real change. • Be ready to suggest an alternative. “You cannot risk being trapped by the enemy in his sudden agreement with your demand and saying, “You’re right—we don’t know what to do about this issue. Now you tell us.” –Saul Alinsky • Consider accepting the offer on a trial basis: • Establish criteria to assess success. • Establish a time frame for reviewing outcomes.

  22. Last words . . . • “Action is the catalyst that creates accomplishments. It is the path that takes us from uncrafted hopes to realized dreams.” • --Thomas Huxley (1825-1895) “One person can make a difference, and every person must try.” --President John F. Kennedy (1917-1963)

  23. Resources: • National Mental Health Consumers’ Self-Help Clearinghouse: http://www.mhselfhelp.org • Consumer-driven Services Directory: http://www.cdsdirectory.org/ • Mental Health Association of Southeastern Pennsylvania: http://www.mhasp.org • Institute for Recovery and Community Integration: http://www.mhrecovery.org • UPenn Collaborative on Community Integration: www.upennrrtc.org

  24. Resources: • Google: • 82,700 Web sites for “Advocacy tips” in a quarter of a second • Not all of the sites will be useful, but many will. (See slides at the end of this presentation for some useful sites.) • Public library

  25. Resources: • “Systems Advocacy,” National Mental Health Consumers’ Self-Help Clearinghouse: http://www.mhselfhelp.org/techasst/view.php?techasst_id=13 • “Tips for Legislative Advocacy,” Justice for Immigrants: http://www.justiceforimmigrants.org/ParishKit/TipsLegisAdvocacy.pdf • “Systems Advocacy,” Brain Injury Resource Center: http://www.headinjury.com/advosystem.html • “A Guide to Disability Rights Laws,” U.S. Department of Justice: http://www.usdoj.gov/crt/ada/cguide.htm • Mississippi Leadership Academy http://www.mla.mh.tripod.com

  26. Resources: • “Legislative Advocacy Tips,” Substance Abuse and Addiction Recovery Alliance of Virginia: http://www.saara.org/docs/2007/Legislative%20Advocacy%20Tips%202007.doc • “Engaging Supporters as Advocates and Activists Through Grassroots Organizing,” American Arts Alliance: http://www.americanartsalliance.org/americanartsalliance/grassroots_organizing_tips.html

  27. Resources: • Administration on Aging Media Advocacy Toolkit: http://www.aoa.gov/press/Media_Advocacy/Media_Advocacy.asp • National Peace Corps Association Advocacy Manual, http://www.rpcv.org/pages/sitepage.cfm?id=552

  28. Resources: • “An Activists’ (sic) Strategy for Effective Online Networking,” One Northwest: http://www.onenw.org/toolkit/activists-strategy • “Rights and Protection and Advocacy,” Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration: http://mentalhealth.samhsa.gov/publications/allpubs/P&A/

  29. Resources: • “Advocacy Tools and Guidelines,” CARE: http://www.care.org/getinvolved/advocacy/tools.asp • “Ten Reasons to Lobby for Your Cause,” Independent Sector: http://www.independentsector.org/Nonprofit_Information_Center/TenReasonstoLobby.pdf • “Advocacy Tools,” New York Library Association: http://www.nyla.org/index.php?page_id=514

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