Remove Advocacy Remove Legislation Remove Social Media
article thumbnail

Ask A Librarian: Dealing with haters?

Librarian.net

In New England we mostly haven’t seen the legislation issues that they’ve had other places. Here’s a few bullet points that we sent to the people who signed the letter of support (2100 signatures so far) for her, giving suggestions. __ Are you on social media? Positive comments only!

article thumbnail

Library Cracks the Code on How To Tell Stories to Stakeholders: They Use Email! Here’s How Their Targeted Newsletter Works

Super Library Marketing

I was searching for their website and social media presence.” She wanted to share a newsletter her library sends to lawmakers and legislators. News releases in the local media, flyers in branches, our website and social media platforms – those are great ways to get information out,” explains Claudine. “We

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

CFP: Advocacy and Policy Work for Academic and Research Library Workers: Perspectives and Strategies #ACRL #ACRLPublication

A Library Writer's Blog

Dear Colleagues, We are issuing a call for proposals for an edited volume tentatively titled, Advocacy and Policy Work for Academic and Research Library Workers: Perspectives and Strategies to be published by ACRL (forthcoming Spring 2024).

article thumbnail

How to Rise Up for Parks and Recreation This July — Episode 116

Open Space Radio: Parks and Recreation Trends

So, all month long, NRPA will be highlighting the amazing impact that park and recreation professionals are having on their communities – so right off the bat, make sure you’re following NRPA on social media ( Facebook , Instagram , Twitter and LinkedIn ) to catch some of these amazing stories.

article thumbnail

Government Mortgage Interest Rates: A Serious Discussion about the Intertwined Topics of Risk Adjustment and Cross-subsidies

The Stoop (NYU Furman Center)

14 Only when government gets involved – which is when policy and political concerns are combined with advocacy by ideological and economic interest groups – does one sometimes see something different, with the inevitably resulting cross-subsidies. the legislation that established them). It is discussed below. [19]

article thumbnail

Too Quick to Pronounce Trump Budget Dead on Arrival

Poverty & Policy

What matters more here is legislative strategy — not, one notes, an expertise our President brought to the White House or seems to be learning. We can donate to advocacy organizations, if we can afford to, join their social media campaigns, etc. Advocacy organizations formed issue-specific and linked coalitions.