Dave Pollard's environmental philosophy, creative works, business papers and essays. In search of a better way to live and make a living, and a better understanding of how the world really works.
Most
people know Peter Block as the consultant's consultant -- he wrote the
book that many consultants use as their methodology. Since then he is
best known for his book Stewardship, that I reviewed two years ago, and his more recent spin-off The Answer to How is Yes.
Stewardship
was about how to convert hierarchical organizations into flat,
responsible, sustainable, entrepreneurial organizations, something like
what I have come to call Natural Enterprises.
His new book, Community,
proposes, analogously to convert isolated, hopeless neighbourhoods into
dynamic, self-directed communities. I have the same general concern
about the new book that I had about Stewardship: Why struggle to
transform a dysfunctional corporation, or neighbourhood, into one that
works, when it's much easier to create a new one, a Natural Enterprise
or an Intentional Community, from scratch? And has anyone effectively,
and sustainably, re-formed a corporation or community? Are Savannah, Boston, Chicago and Portland really now communities that work?
Block starts with a series of theses about what's wrong with modern neighbourhoods and with our ways of trying to better them:
Every community is different, and things that work in one don't necessarily work in others.
We try to solve problems through individual persuasion and action, instead of collectively.
When
cities start to decay, too often those with money, energy and ideas
flee to suburban or exurban areas instead of staying to deal with the
problems.
The cult of leadership lets citizens off the hook and breeds dependency and entitlement.
Engagement of citizens is negative: "Many citizens get engaged in community only when they are angry".
Social
service organizations are stigmatized as inefficient, compassion is
marginalized, and the only news reported is crime and scandal.
The
preoccupation of those working with the challenges of cities is on
coping with fear and finding fault. In this worldview, he says:
We
are a community of problems to be solved. Those who can best articulate
the problems and the solutions dominate the conversation. The future is
defined by the interplay of self-interests, dependent on the
accountability of leaders, and controlled by a small number of wealthy
and powerful people, we categorize as "they". Community action is aimed
at eliminating the sources of fear. We aim at a set of needs and
deficiencies. To eliminate fear and respond to neediness, we try harder
at what we've been doing all along, what isn't working. We lock down
neighbourhoods, build more prisons, reduce tolerance to zero. We call
for better programs, more expertise, more funding, better leadership,
stronger consequences, and more protection.
Block's framework for genuinely improving communities has six components:
The engagement and convening of a broad cross-section of the community to explore issues and ideas collectively.
The
creation of small groups within larger groups as the basis for
exploratory conversations focused on possibilities, not problems.
A
focus on questions that open rather than rushing to answers, that
encourage learning and exploration rather than giving and getting
advice.
The creation of several types of conversation:
Conversations
of invitation: invitations that declare the possibility of collective
resolution and action, frame the choice to attend or not, describe the
hurdle and expectation of participants, stress appreciation for those
who choose to attend, and are delivered personally.
Conversations
of possibility: surfacing/exploring the crossroads that each
participant is at that gives him or her passion about the subject
Conversations of ownership: surfacing/exploring what actions each participant is prepared to commit to
Conversations of dissent: surfacing/exploring doubts, reservations, and reasons for lack of commitment
Conversations of appreciation: surfacing/exploring the value, learning and connection each participant has received from others
The creation of an atmosphere of hospitality, welcoming strangers.
The creation of physical and social space that supports belonging.
After
describing how this framework has worked in several communities,
including his own (Cincinnati, which he describes as "like most of our
urban centers, like New Orleans without the flood"), Block concludes
with a list of pressing urban issues and intractable problems the
methodology could be applied to.
If you notice a lot of
similarities between this methodology and Open Space, you're not alone
-- Block acknowledges Open Space as one of the techniques that he draws
on.
What I liked most about the book was the diagnosis of what hasn't
worked. These failed approaches are almost instantly recognizable to
anyone who has ever worked on an urban renewal or community improvement
project.
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