Social Change

Social Change

Purpose

The Social Change domain enables modelling of campaigns, movements, and interventions aimed at addressing systemic injustice, inequality, and exclusion. It provides structured representations of advocacy efforts, union actions, policy challenges, public mobilisations, organizational change initiatives, institutional reforms, and revolutionary transformations, linking them to other Orthogramic domains such as Capability, Value Stream, Stakeholder, Strategy, and Policy.

This domain supports campaigners, researchers, consultants, organisational staff, government officials, NGO workers, and social change professionals to:

  • Map advocacy campaigns and union-led industrial actions using capabilities and value streams

  • Document worker-led organizational change initiatives and internal advocacy efforts

  • Model government-sponsored social reform programs and policy interventions

  • Track NGO campaigns, community organizing, and civil society initiatives

  • Analyze consultant-driven social change projects and transformation strategies

  • Track influence networks and the pathways from protest to policy impact

  • Analyse institutional structures and power asymmetries

  • Design strategic interventions that align with social and economic transformation goals

  • Measure social change outcomes using structured, repeatable metrics

  • Document revolutionary movements and fundamental system transformations

  • Model resistance to tyrannical and authoritarian governance structures

  • Analyse both violent and non-violent approaches to social change

  • Support progressive social democratic approaches to systemic change

Key Concepts

Systemic advocacy: Efforts directed at long-term policy or institutional change

Collective action: Strikes, protests, boycotts, and industrial actions coordinated by groups or unions

Organizational change advocacy: Worker-led initiatives within organizations to promote progressive policies, practices, and cultural transformation

Institutional reform: Government-sponsored programs and policy interventions aimed at advancing social justice and democratic values

Civil society mobilization: NGO-led campaigns, community organizing efforts, and advocacy initiatives that promote progressive social change

Professional social change practice: Consultant-driven projects and strategic initiatives designed to advance social justice within organizations and communities

Campaign orchestration: Staged or escalated sequences of interventions over time

Revolutionary change: Fundamental transformation of political, social, or economic systems through organized popular action, ranging from non-violent mass movements to armed resistance, aimed at replacing existing power structures with new institutions

Revolutionary legitimacy: The moral, legal, and political justification for revolutionary action, typically based on principles such as resistance to tyranny, democratic self-determination, or liberation from oppression

Revolutionary phases: The progression of revolutionary movements through distinct stages, from pre-revolutionary conditions through active confrontation to post-revolutionary consolidation

Impact pathway modelling: Linking action types to policy shifts and social equity outcomes

Measurement frameworks: Evaluating maturity, breadth, impact, and resilience of activism

Attributes

Attribute

Description

Example

Attribute

Description

Example

Name

Name/title of the social change action or campaign

"Fair Wage Now" Strike Series

description

Short summary of the goal and focus

National industrial action targeting minimum wage reform

activityType

Type of activity or intervention

Campaign, Protest, Strike, Picket, Boycott, Legal Challenge, Coalition, Research Program, Revolution, Insurrection, Uprising, Organizational Reform, Policy Initiative, Community Organizing, Consulting Project, Institutional Transformation

specificActions

Specific actions employed

Strike, Protest March, Picket Line, Consumer Boycott, Mass Demonstration, Civil Disobedience, Armed Resistance, Worker Petition, Policy Advocacy, Community Education, Organizational Training

leadingOrganizations

Key organisations leading or coordinating the action

National Union of Educators, Housing Rights Watch, Revolutionary Council, HR Department, Ministry of Social Affairs, Community NGO, Social Justice Consultancy

systemicProblem

Systemic problem or injustice being addressed

Structural wage suppression through casualisation, Authoritarian repression, Workplace discrimination, Policy gaps in social protection, Community disinvestment

primaryAffectedGroups

Primary groups impacted by the injustice

Migrant workers, renters, youth labour, political dissidents, employees, marginalized communities, service users

stakeholders

Structured list of involved or affected actors

[{"name": "Retail Workers Union", "type": "Union", "influenceLevel": "High", "engagementStrategy": "Collective Bargaining"}]

policyTargets

Legislation or policy being influenced or challenged

Modern Awards, Industrial Relations Act, Constitutional Amendment, Organizational Policy, Government Regulation

institutionalTargets

State or corporate entities engaged or targeted

Fair Work Commission, Department of Labour, Authoritarian Government, Corporate Leadership, Local Government

tactics

Advocacy and action tactics used

[{"tacticType": "Strike", "description": "Coordinated work stoppage", "channel": "Onsite and media", "violenceLevel": "Non-violent"}]

escalationSequence

Sequence of increasing pressure or intervention

Ballot โ†’ Strike โ†’ Legal Action โ†’ Mass Picket

economicImpact

Scale and nature of economic disruption

Supply chain disruption in logistics and delivery sectors

legalBasis

Jurisdictional basis for action

Protected industrial action under Fair Work Act 2009

capabilities

List of related capabilities leveraged

[{"capabilityId": "cap-collective-bargaining", "name": "Collective Bargaining", "levelOfUse": "High"}]

valueStreams

Value flows disrupted or transformed

Workforce Participation, Wage Distribution

successMeasurement

Method for evaluating effectiveness

Collective Action Maturity Model, Social Impact Index

risks

Operational or reputational risks

[{"riskType": "Legal", "description": "Injunctions from employer"}]

keyPerformanceIndicators

KPIs used to measure campaign success

[{"indicatorName": "Wage increase %", "targetValue": "10%", "measurementMethod": "Post-negotiation audit"}]

improvementAreas

Areas to enhance strategy or inclusiveness

Expand union coalition, increase regional outreach

strategicGoals

Broader goals supported by this action

SDG 8: Decent Work and Economic Growth

Revolution-Specific Attributes

Attribute

Description

Example

Attribute

Description

Example

revolutionType

Classification of revolutionary approach

"Political Revolution", "Social Revolution", "Economic Revolution", "Cultural Revolution"

violenceClassification

Degree of violence employed

"Non-violent", "Minimal Violence", "Armed Resistance", "Civil War"

revolutionaryScope

Geographic and institutional reach

"Local Uprising", "Regional Revolution", "National Revolution", "International Revolution"

legitimacyBasis

Legal and moral justification for revolution

"Tyrannical Oppression", "Colonial Liberation", "Democratic Restoration", "Economic Justice"

revolutionaryLeadership

Leadership structure and organization

[{"leadershipType": "Decentralized", "organizationType": "Popular Movement", "keyFigures": ["Revolutionary Council"]}]

targetRegime

Specific government or system being challenged

"Authoritarian Government", "Colonial Administration", "Oligarchy", "Military Dictatorship"

revolutionaryPhases

Progression through revolutionary stages

["Grievance Accumulation", "Mobilization", "Confrontation", "System Overthrow", "Reconstruction"]

internationalSupport

External backing or opposition

[{"supportType": "Diplomatic", "source": "Allied Nations", "level": "High"}]

historicalPrecedent

Reference to similar historical movements

"American Revolution", "Velvet Revolution", "Indian Independence Movement"

counter-RevolutionaryForces

Opposition and resistance to revolutionary change

[{"forceType": "State Security", "strength": "High", "tactics": ["Repression", "Propaganda"]}]

Organizational and Institutional Change Attributes

Attribute

Description

Example

Attribute

Description

Example

changeScope

Level and breadth of organizational change

"Department-level", "Organization-wide", "Multi-organizational", "Sector-wide"

changeAgentType

Who is driving the change initiative

"Worker Committee", "HR Leadership", "External Consultant", "Government Agency", "NGO Partnership"

institutionalContext

Type of organization or institution

"Private Corporation", "Government Agency", "Non-profit Organization", "Educational Institution", "Healthcare System"

changeMethodology

Approach or framework used for change

"Participatory Action Research", "Organizational Development", "Policy Design Thinking", "Community Organizing Model"

resourceSource

Funding and resource origin

"Internal Budget", "Government Grant", "Foundation Funding", "Consulting Contract", "Volunteer Resources"

timeline

Expected duration of change initiative

"3-month pilot", "1-year implementation", "Multi-year transformation", "Ongoing program"

successMetrics

How success will be measured

"Employee satisfaction scores", "Policy adoption rates", "Community engagement levels", "Equity indicators"

resistanceFactors

Anticipated or encountered opposition

"Management resistance", "Cultural barriers", "Resource constraints", "Political opposition"

sustainabilityPlan

How changes will be maintained

"Policy institutionalization", "Training programs", "Ongoing monitoring", "Cultural embedding"

Organizational and Institutional Change Tactics

Tactic Type

Description

Violence Level

Channel

Example

Tactic Type

Description

Violence Level

Channel

Example

massDemonstration

Large-scale peaceful protests

Non-violent

Public Squares

"Million Person March"

civilDisobedience

Systematic non-compliance with laws

Non-violent

Public and Private Institutions

"Tax Resistance Campaign"

generalStrike

Economy-wide work stoppage

Non-violent

Economic Infrastructure

"National Labor Shutdown"

armedResistance

Organized military opposition

Violent

Rural and Urban Operations

"Guerrilla Warfare Campaign"

institutionalTakeover

Seizure of government buildings

Variable

Government Facilities

"Capitol Occupation"

informationWarfare

Propaganda and counter-narrative

Non-violent

Media and Digital Platforms

"Revolutionary Broadcasting"

parallelInstitutionBuilding

Creating alternative governance structures

Non-violent

Community Organizations

"Shadow Government Formation"

economicDisruption

Targeting financial and trade systems

Non-violent

Economic Infrastructure

"Currency Boycott"

Enumeration Tables

Activity Type Classifications (activityType)

Primary Category

Subcategories

Description

Primary Category

Subcategories

Description

grassrootsOrganizing

Campaign, Protest, Strike, Picket, Boycott

Bottom-up mobilization efforts

institutionalAction

Legal Challenge, Coalition, Policy Initiative

Working within existing systems

revolutionaryAction

Revolution, Insurrection, Uprising

Fundamental system transformation

organizationalChange

Organizational Reform, Consulting Project

Internal institutional transformation

researchAndAnalysis

Research Program, Policy Analysis

Knowledge-based advocacy

communityDevelopment

Community Organizing, Institutional Transformation

Locality-based change efforts

Stakeholder Types and Influence Levels (stakeholderTypes)

Stakeholder Type

Typical Influence Level

Engagement Strategies

Examples

Stakeholder Type

Typical Influence Level

Engagement Strategies

Examples

laborUnions

High

Collective Bargaining, Strike Action

National Union of Educators

governmentAgencies

High

Policy Development, Regulation

Department of Labour

corporateLeadership

High

Negotiation, Public Pressure

CEO, Board of Directors

ngosCivilSociety

Medium-High

Coalition Building, Advocacy

Housing Rights Watch

communityGroups

Medium

Grassroots Organizing, Local Pressure

Neighborhood Associations

professionalOrganizations

Medium

Standards Setting, Member Mobilization

Medical Associations

academicInstitutions

Medium

Research, Public Education

Universities, Think Tanks

mediaOrganizations

Medium

Public Awareness, Narrative Framing

News Outlets, Social Media

religiousOrganizations

Medium

Moral Authority, Community Mobilization

Faith Communities

individualCitizens

Low-Medium

Voting, Petitions, Participation

Affected Communities

Risk Types and Severity Levels (riskTypes)

Risk Category

Risk Types

Severity Levels

Mitigation Approaches

Risk Category

Risk Types

Severity Levels

Mitigation Approaches

Political

Government Backlash, Policy Reversal, Electoral Losses

Low, Medium, High, Critical

Political Strategy, Coalition Building

Legal

Injunctions, Arrests, Lawsuits, Criminalization

Low, Medium, High, Critical

Legal Strategy, Rights Documentation

Economic

Funding Loss, Economic Retaliation, Job Losses

Low, Medium, High, Critical

Diversified Funding, Economic Protection

Security

Violence, Intimidation, Surveillance, Repression

Low, Medium, High, Critical

Security Protocols, International Monitoring

Organizational

Internal Conflict, Leadership Disputes, Fragmentation

Low, Medium, High, Critical

Governance Structures, Conflict Resolution

Reputational

Media Attacks, Public Opposition, Credibility Loss

Low, Medium, High, Critical

Communications Strategy, Transparency

Operational

Resource Constraints, Capacity Limitations, Burnout

Low, Medium, High, Critical

Capacity Building, Sustainability Planning

Success Measurement Categories (successMeasurement)

Measurement Type

Indicators

Time Horizon

Data Sources

Measurement Type

Indicators

Time Horizon

Data Sources

outputMetrics

Events Held, People Reached, Materials Distributed

Short-term (0-6 months)

Event Records, Media Tracking

outcomeMetrics

Policy Changes, Behavior Changes, Awareness Levels

Medium-term (6 months-2 years)

Surveys, Policy Analysis

impactMetrics

Systemic Changes, Cultural Shifts, Power Redistribution

Long-term (2+ years)

Longitudinal Studies, Institutional Analysis

processMetrics

Participation Rates, Coalition Strength, Capacity Building

Ongoing

Membership Data, Assessment Tools

Resource Sources and Sustainability (resourceSource)

Resource Type

Sources

Sustainability Level

Typical Duration

Resource Type

Sources

Sustainability Level

Typical Duration

financial

Grants, Donations, Membership Fees, Government Funding

Variable

Project-based to Ongoing

humanResources

Volunteers, Paid Staff, Consultants, Coalition Partners

Variable

Event-based to Permanent

infrastructure

Meeting Spaces, Technology, Equipment, Communications

Medium-High

Ongoing

knowledgeExpertise

Research, Training, Technical Assistance, Legal Support

High

Ongoing

politicalCapital

Relationships, Credibility, Access, Influence

High

Ongoing

Change Methodology and Approaches (changeMethodolog)

Methodology Category

Specific Approaches

Best Used For

Key Principles

Methodology Category

Specific Approaches

Best Used For

Key Principles

communityOrganizing

Alinsky Model, Broad-Based Organizing, Issue-Based Campaigns

Grassroots Power Building

Self-Interest, Relationships, Power Analysis

policyAdvocacy

Inside Strategy, Outside Strategy, Hybrid Approaches

Legislative/Regulatory Change

Evidence-Based, Strategic Timing

organizationalDevelopment

Change Management, Culture Change, Systems Thinking

Internal Transformation

Participatory, Sustainable, Systemic

directAction

Civil Disobedience, Mass Demonstrations, Disruption

Public Pressure, Visibility

Non-violent, Strategic, Escalating

legalStrategy

Test Cases, Impact Litigation, Legal Education

Rights Protection, Precedent Setting

Constitutional Principles, Due Process

researchAndEducation

Participatory Action Research, Popular Education, Policy Analysis

Knowledge Building, Consciousness Raising

Community-Controlled, Action-Oriented

Escalation Sequence Patterns (Escalation Sequence)

Escalation Stage

Typical Actions

Decision Factors

Examples

Escalation Stage

Typical Actions

Decision Factors

Examples

initialEngagement

Meetings, Letters, Petitions

Response from Targets

"Request meeting with management"

publicPressure

Media Campaigns, Public Forums, Demonstrations

Media Coverage, Public Support

"Press conference announcing demands"

coalitionBuilding

Ally Recruitment, Endorsements, Solidarity Actions

Broader Support, Resource Mobilization

"Union endorsement, community support"

directPressure

Protests, Boycotts, Strikes

Target Responsiveness, Cost-Benefit

"Consumer boycott, work stoppage"

intensiveConfrontation

Mass Actions, Civil Disobedience, Disruption

Strategic Necessity, Risk Assessment

"Capitol occupation, mass arrests"

institutionalChallenge

Legal Action, Electoral Strategy, System Challenge

Legal Grounds, Political Opportunity

"Lawsuit filing, electoral campaigns"

Violence Classification Framework (violenceClassification)

Violence Level

Definition

Examples

Legitimacy Considerations

Violence Level

Definition

Examples

Legitimacy Considerations

non-violent

No physical harm to persons or property

Peaceful Protests, Civil Disobedience

Universally Legitimate

propertyDisruption

Damage to property without harm to persons

Banner Drops, Blockades

Context-Dependent

minimalViolence

Limited physical confrontation, defensive

Self-Defense, Protective Actions

Defensive Legitimacy

armedResistance

Organized military opposition

Guerrilla Warfare, Armed Struggle

Last Resort, Extreme Oppression

civilWar

Large-scale armed conflict

Revolutionary War, Liberation Struggle

Historical Precedent Required

Sub-elements

Social Change Action Stage

Element

Description

Example

Element

Description

Example

stageName

Name/title of the stage

"Mobilisation and Ballot Phase"

stageDescription

Description of what happens in this phase

Organising members, voting to authorise protected action

intendedOutcome

Intended outcome of this stage

Build collective power and authorise escalation

The Orthogramic Metamodel license: Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 (CC BY-SA 4.0), ensuring it remains open, collaborative, and widely accessible.