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  • Tiffany von Emmel 4:54 am on March 29, 2007 Permalink
    Tags: ,   

    Network versus organization 

    Yesterday, I was talking with Kaliya Hamlin, the Identity Woman. We had both been at Nexus for Change and were debriefing. We were discussing the difference between networks and traditional organizations and how change methods developed for organizations don't necessarily apply to transforming social networks of individuals. Online community-builders and community organizers may be more familiar with influencing networks. But, organizational consultants are not generally trained to have a network mind.

    Networks can be decentralized, clustering, or centralized. Traditional organizations may seem to have a clear center of power and influence. Some organizations are organized more like decentralized network. Ori Brafman's Starfish and the Spider gives a great introduction to these artful things. Now, organizations also have social networks, which are usually not apparent at first glance, but they can be identified with Social Network Analysis. In decentralized networks, individuals are more loosely coupled. So, getting everyone into the same room for a visioning process is not doable, because who is everyone in the system, anyway? Identity is fuzzy and in flux.

    The way that I think about networks comes from my former life of being a Shiatsu therapist, using Chinese Medicine. Seeing the self as a network of energy meridians in a large ecosystem of meridians, I think similarly about social networks. The task of influencing change becomes one of tracking, attracting and dispersing energy to create vitality and dynamic balance. The use of self to influence becomes much more important in a decentralized network.

     
  • Tiffany von Emmel 2:02 am on March 9, 2007 Permalink
    Tags: , , , , , participatory   

    Nexus for Change 

    In a few weeks is the Nexus for Change conference, which is all about advancing participatory change methods. I am going to be there with flippers ready. This event promises to be a fertile one. Facilitators, community organizers, leaders, researchers will come together to explore how we facilitate positive change with participatory methods for groups, organizations and communties. Participatory in its design and content and offered at cost, it is more of an unconference. Dreamfish will be there. I hope to see you.

     

    Here's what the organizers say…

    "Our focus will be on leveraging the power of over 60 approaches being used to transform whole organizations and communities as they tackle 21st Century Challenges. These approaches are broadly referred to as large-group methods/interventions, whole system change, or large-scale change. What make them unique are two foundation assumptions: high involvement and a systemic approach to improvement. At this conference, we will be working side-by-side to:

    • Address critical needs at local and global levels,
    • Expand the reach of the methods around the world,
    • Design significant field research projects,
    • Invent new tools, techniques, and applications,
    • Incorporate technology to leverage existing methods,
    • Connect with others to form joint ventures,
    • Innovate educational programs and courses,
    • Craft a common language, and
    • Articulate a platform for this body of work.

    The NEXUS is an opportunity for us to transcend our individual contributions and achieve something bigger than we ever thought possible. We will not know what "bigger" is until we get together."

    $299 registration >

    Here are some of the people who will be there…

    Billie Alban, Emily & Dick Axelrod, Jean Bartunek, Peter Block, Juanita Brown, Barbara Bunker, Tom Devane, Susan Dupre, Merrelyn Emery, David Gershon, Peggy Holman, Cheryl Honey, David Isaacs, Jake Jacobs, Jim Rough, Sylvia James, Sandra Janoff, Stewart Levine, Harrison Owen, Gabriel Shirley, Nancy White, Marvin Weisbord, Diana Whitney, and many many more…

     

     
  • Tiffany von Emmel 1:10 pm on March 7, 2007 Permalink
    Tags: ,   

    More Free Hugs 

    Last October, Don Bushnell and I were giving out free hugs at a conference, inspired by the Free Hug project video. We had so much fun that next Friday, we are setting up a Free Hugs booth at the Dreamfish Launch party so that we can give some squeezes. Our free hug project is part of a larger phenomena of social action projects of varying artists worldwide. Below is the World Hug Day project.

     

    World Hug Day
    by Gao Brothers
    Beijing New Art Projects

    "We propose the World Hug Day project. We started it in Shangdong Province, China, together with a worldwide Internet project, an interactive international campaign via the Internet, and have got enormous feedback and support. We carried out the first such performance, The Utopia Of Hugging For Twenty Minutes, on 10 September 2000. We invited some 150 volunteers, who were previously strangers to each other, to participate. We asked the participants to choose a person at random for a hug at the same time, and then cluster into group hugs. Since then, we have hugged hundreds of strangers, and organized group hugs for strangers in different public locations in different ways many times."

    In order to develop the World Hug Day project worldwide, we are planning to go global to hug hundreds of strangers, with permission, of course, and organize group hugs for strangers, and hold a travel exhibition of these photos of the hug-performance worldwide.

    http://www.world-hug-day.net

     

    Biography
    Gao Zhen (b. 1956) and Gao Qiang (b. 1962) were both born in Jinan, China.
    The Gao brothers are a pair of artists based in Beijing. They are authors of several published works, including How Far Can You Walk in One Day in Beijing, The Current State Of Chinese Avant-Garde Art and The Report Of Art Environment, who have been collaborating on installation, performance, photography works and writing since the mid-1980s. Some of their works were published in A History Of China Modern Art, China Avant-garde Photography, The Best Photography Of China, etc. and collected by Chinese and foreign people and museums.

    4 Jiuxianqiao Road,
    The Factory 798 Art District, Beijing
    P.O. Box 8503
    Beijing 100015
    China
    Tel: +86 10 84566660
    Fax: +86 10 84566660
    gaobrothers [at] gmail [dot] com

     

     
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