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Knowledge Clips summary Social Change Approaches ()

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This is a summary of all the information from the eleven knowledge clips / lectures for the course Social Change Approaches: Development, Implementation and Evaluation.

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Uploaded on
December 7, 2025
Number of pages
17
Written in
2025/2026
Type
Class notes
Professor(s)
Dr. jantien van berkel; prof. dr. john de wit
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All classes

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KC 1.1: Planning for successful social change

How to decide on a change approach?
Imagine you work in the ministry of health. You need to come up with a strategy to reduce vaping among
youngsters. What do you propose?
-​ common approaches: ‘just say no’ or arousing fear or concerns about the risks of a behaviour
-​ most approaches are not scientifically grounded, just ‘seemed like a good idea at the time’

Taking a systemic approach to social change
1.​ What is the issue to address? → what, who, where, when
2.​ What causes it? → behavior + environment
3.​ What can be done about it? → change approaches
4.​ How can approaches be promoted? → implementation in practice
5.​ How do we know if it works? → process and effect evaluation

Vaping example
1.​ What is the issue to address? → health risks of vaping
2.​ What causes it? → uninformed choices, peer pressure, social norms
3.​ What can be done about it? → communication campaign
4.​ How can approaches be promoted? → social media ads
5.​ How do we know if it works? → assess behavior changes

Developing a theory of change
-​ Defining long-term goals and identifying preconditions to achieve those goals
-​ Guiding the change process by describing causal linkages
-​ helps understand what causes the problem, how to solve it and guides solution approaches

Example of a theory of change
Series of boxes and connection arrows = logic model (show causal linkages in theory of change):




KC 1.2: Intervention mapping approach

Successful change approaches are the result of careful planning

How to undertake planning of social change approaches? → Easy answers: make use of a planning tool!
-​ introducing Intervention Mapping

What is Intervention Mapping?

, -​ Approach for developing effective behavior change interventions
-​ Mostly applied to health promotion
-​ Relevant for interventions on any issue requiring behaviour change

Intervention and policy: what do we mean?
-​ Intervention = any action to change a situation
-​ Program = series of planned activities
-​ Service = dedicated organization
-​ Campaign = broad communication
-​ Training = building capacity
-​ Policy = rules or guidelines for actions
-​ specific type of intervention
-​ often general or abstract
Policies provide direction, likely require concrete actions to achieve goal

Key characteristics of intervention mapping
1.​ Ecological approach
-​ looks not only at individual factors, but also at how social and physical environments affect
people's actions
2.​ Participation of all stakeholders
-​ not only program developers etc., but also people affected by it and other experts
3.​ Use of theories and evidence

Intervention mapping is a stepwise process
-​ 6 steps, each encompassing specific tasks
-​ Blueprint for design, implementation and evaluation
-​ Theoretical, empirical and practical information




Step 1: assessment of needs and opportunities
-​ logic model that identifies behavioral and environmental factors that need to be addressed + the
determinants of the behavior of the affected people + environmental agents that need to be changed
Step 2: Specify desired outcomes and what needs to change to achieve those
Step 3: Match change approaches to determinants of behavior; understanding of mechanisms & conditions

, Simplified intervention logic model (theory of change)




Step 4: Acceptable, feasible and usable resources
Step 5: Apply intervention mapping to develop interventions related to intervention adoption, implementation &
maintenance
Step 6: Assess change in health or social issue, behavior and environment and behavioral determinants

Concluding
-​ Specifying what behaviours of what actors need to change
-​ Identify and prioritize determinants of behavior
-​ Select change methods to address determinants

KC 2.3: Theories of determinants of behavior

Changing behavior is critical to address social issues
1.​ Whose behavior?
2.​ What factors shape behavior?

Changing behaviors of affected people and groups + behavior of environmental agents
-​ changing environmental conditions is done by changing behavior of environmental agents (= behavior
of people who can change environmental conditions)
-​ environmental agents behavior can both shape environmental conditions that direct impact on social
issue + influence behavior of people affected by social issues
-​ (see simplified intervention logic model)

Factors shaping behavior
-​ Characteristics of individual and environment
-​ Individual, social and structural factors
-​ In health promotion planning, distinction is made:
1.​ Predisposing factors (motivation)
-​ individual factors related to motivation to change (eg. knowledge, beliefs, attitudes)
2.​ Reinforcing factors (social influence)
-​ social factors that capture how others influence us (eg. peer norms, social support)
3.​ Enabling factors (facilitation)
-​ structural factors related to barriers and opportunities (ie.resources) in environment, but
own skills and abilities also count

Social Cognition Approach
-​ Individuals thoughts about a situation guides their actions
-​ Behavior is a function of subjective perceptions; meaning
-​ Specifying which perceptions shape behavior in what way

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