**Advocacy means taking action to effect change in an issue that personally matters to you**. Advocacy makes up a large portion of activity undertaken in community science [projects](/projects). These projects often produce much-needed data about an environmental issue, and that data needs someone to speak for it [1].
Public Lab identifies four main pillars of advocacy:
1. Communicating with Government;
2. Communicating with elected officials;
3. Awareness raising, organizing, mobilizing, nonviolent direct action; and
4. Litigation
This page is a place to collect and organize resources on advocacy. Visit the [advocacy tag page](https://publiclab.org/tag/advocacy) to see the latest community posts about advocacy on Public Lab, and get updates on this topic by following:
Subscribe to Advocacy
Also visit related pages on organizing, community science, and law and policy.
Sources: [1] @kgradow1’s [presentation about the bucket air monitor](https://publiclab.org/notes/amocorro/05-12-2021/talk-recording-mobilizing-people-to-act-on-air-pollution-with-the-bucket-air-monitor-a-community-science-tool).
# Advocacy methods
**Within the four main types of advocacy** (communicating with government; communicating with elected officials; awareness raising, organizing, mobilizing, nonviolent direct action; and litigation), **here are some particular processes that projects may seek to generate or contribute to:**
* [Telling your story](https://publiclab.org/notes/joyofsoy/08-07-2020/tips-for-environmental-storytelling)
* Relationship building (see section on audiences, below)
* Awareness raising / education
* [Community organizing](https://publiclab.org/wiki/organizing) / mobilizing
* [Getting media coverage](https://publiclab.org/wiki/creating-a-media-campaign)
* Pressuring electeds to act on an issue
* Making an issue a focus of an electoral campaign season
* [Providing public input](https://publiclab.org/wiki/public-comment) to established regulatory processes such as permitting for land uses that are continuing, changing, or new.
* Providing cover to regulators so they can stand up to political/economic influence over an agency's action (Example: showing proof of valid grounds to sue the government agency for not acting)
* Triggering agency investigation, administrative action, and/or enforcement action
* Designing regulation in situations where there is none
* Mediation
* Litigation against industry
* Litigation against government agencies
* Nonviolent direct action
**Types of audiences projects may seek to reach:**
* Others who are affected
* Neighbors who are also constituents
* Landowners making private land use decisions
* [Elected representatives](https://publiclab.org/notes/stevie/03-20-2017/thinking-about-local-level-advocacy)
* Agency civil servants
* Industry employees, management, ownership, or board of directors
* Journalists
* Environmental lawyers
Additional methods published on Public Lab and tagged with `advocacy` will appear on the [advocacy methods page](https://publiclab.org/methods#advocacy)
## Activities
Activities on Public Lab that have been tagged with `activity:advocacy` will appear here
[activities:advocacy]
## Research notes
Research notes on Public Lab that have been tagged with `advocacy` will appear here
[notes:advocacy]
## Wikis on advocacy
[wikis:advocacy]
## Join the conversation
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[questions:advocacy]