Three Approaches to Stigma Reduction Initiatives
Overview
This implementation brief from The ALIVE National Centre for Mental Health Research Translation is part of a five-part series on stigma and its impacts. It compares and contrasts three overarching categories of public stigma reduction approaches — educational, contact-based, and protest-based — outlining what each involves, examples of each in practice, key considerations, and lived experience perspectives on their strengths and limitations. The brief emphasises that meaningful stigma reduction requires ongoing work using multiple strategies rather than one-off activities, and provides guidance to support organisations in selecting and implementing approaches aligned with their aims, resources, and key messages.
Developed by the ALIVE National Centre for Mental Health Research Translation
Key insights
This implementation brief, part of a five-part series on stigma and its impacts, compares three overarching approaches to public stigma reduction: educational, contact-based, and protest-based. Each approach has distinct aims, mechanisms, examples, and considerations, and each carries different implications for scalability, evidence base, and lived experience involvement. The brief emphasises that meaningful stigma reduction requires ongoing, multi-strategy effort rather than single initiatives, and that careful consideration of aims, resources, and lived experience leadership should guide the selection and implementation of any approach.
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Toggle audience types below to explore.
Organisations planning or reviewing stigma reduction initiatives are a primary audience, with direct guidance on selecting approaches aligned with organisational aims, resources, and messaging.
Staff designing or delivering educational, contact-based, or protest-based stigma reduction activities will find practical considerations and examples relevant to their work.
The brief's framing of stigma reduction as an ongoing, multi-strategy priority, and its discussion of how protest-based approaches can drive systemic reform, makes it relevant to policymakers considering stigma reduction strategy and legislative reform.
People with lived experience who may be involved in delivering stigma reduction initiatives — as educators, speakers, or advocates — are directly addressed through the lived experience perspectives included for each approach.
The brief's emphasis on lived experience leadership across the design and delivery of all three approaches makes it directly relevant to this audience.
The brief identifies differences in the evidence base across the three approaches, including the comparatively limited research on protest-based approaches, making it relevant to researchers in stigma reduction and mental health communications.
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Categories
Resource type
Evidence Summary
Practice Guideline
Practice Point
Target audiences
Consumers
Family Carer Lived Experience Workforce
Practitioners
Policymakers
Service Leaders
Researchers
Translational research priority theme
Intersectional approaches to care
Workforce capability
Working with diverse consumers, families and communities
Embedding responsible, safe and ethical practice
Understanding and responding to trauma
Enabling reflective and supportive ways of working
Embedding evidence-informed continuous improvement
Population cohort
Adults
Collaborative Centre core function
Lived Experience Participation
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