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  • Tiffany von Emmel 3:41 pm on August 23, 2009 Permalink
    Tags: , New Ways to Work,   

    Dreamfish Humanifesto 

    [Note: the Humanifesto has evolved with tweaks and nudges. The current version is here. ]

    We want to flourish.

    We want a workplace, where everyone can create meaningful work. We can find happiness. We can thrive in our livelihoods.

    Dreamfish was born to create a new open world of good work for everyone, everywhere. Dreamfish is for us, all of us – the world’s women to work, get capital, move out of poverty or reenter a workforce or work in open source, for men to explore freely new ways to feel at work, for a person in recovery from anything to make a living, for a young genius to stretch wide, for elders to contribute experience, for the homeless to gain confidence, for a professional to learn creative out of the box skills, for the investor to contribute to what matters, for a young worker to gain meaningful work experience, free of silos. This is sustainability at work. This is ”our” world of work.

    We are welcoming. You may speak Urdu, Spanish or Chinese. You may identifiy as a woman or a man. You may wear a baby sling, hijab, a kippah, a suit, leather, piercings, a pentacle, a political badge, a rainbow, a rosary, tattoos, or something we can only dream of. You may carry a backpack, a guitar or knitting needles or a cane. Conservative or liberal, libertarian or socialist — we believe it’s possible for people of all viewpoints and persuasions to be agents of entrepreneurship. We welcome youth and elders, mothers, activists, professionals, artists, engineers, bloggers, crafters, academics, musicians, photographers, readers, writers, gardeners, ordinary people, extraordinary people, and everyone in between. We welcome people who want to change the world, people who want to do business, people who want to keep in touch, people who want to make great art. We welcome Internet beginners.

    We will thrive at work.
    In our future, we want for millions of us to have created more meaningful work, moved out of poverty, completed thousands of successful projects, and grown as people. We want to:
    *Increase sustainable income – Those of us who are below the poverty line will significantly increase our income and report an income that enables us to be self-sufficient.
    *Resilience – The Survival rate of micro-enterprises is extraordinarily high after five years.
    *Value creation – We each will have transformed our understanding of what is value, and be actively creating a viable, collaborative economy.
    *Environmental footprint – We will reduce, reuse and recycle more. We will dramatically reduce our environmental footprint of our work by working locally and virtually, and sharing resources.

    We can work our way. We want to:

    * Create a livelihood for ourselves with all the necessary tools to succeed.
    * Realize our dreams by working on projects that interest you, not the other way around.
    * Learn valuable technology skills for the new economy.
    * Build a strong support network of dynamic, like-minded individuals to exchange ideas and collaborate.
    * Find the right people to help us accomplish goals.
    * Grow both personally and professionally through collaboration.
    * Share our wealth by mentoring and investing in other dreamfishers.

    We are happy, healthy and principled:

    Diversity principle

    Diversity is core to Dreamfish as a work community. We welcome people of any gender identity or expression, sexual orientation, color of skin, ethnicity, nationality, ability, class, income level, religion, culture, subculture, and political opinion.

    Collaborative Learning Principle

    We mutually support our growth and development. We learn from experiences. We learn by working together. As we do, we develop socially, ethically and professionally.

    We believe that when we jam ”with” our differences, not against, we innovate and transform. Resilient results can come when people from different worlds and world-views move as an organizational jam. A jam is a practice of presence. A jam is not a debate about rightness. It is not fight or flight. It is not positional arguments. Jamming is listening, really listening. It is saying, “Yes, And”.

    Staying with the conversation teaches us about what we did not know, and humbles us in the awareness that there is much more that we don’t know that we don’t know. We learn to live in the gap between what we thought we knew and what is possible. Jamming is not superflous to our work. Jamming is the work. As we practice to jam with one another, so, we emerge with what is possible in our work, in ourselves, and in the world.

    Sustainability Principle

    We actively make choices that mindfully supports the health of projects we work on, our coworkers, the earth and its creatures.

    We believe that sustainability goes beyond a triple bottom line of people, planet and profit. Physicality is core to what is sustainable work. We thrive with biodiversity here as we are part of the biodiversity of our planet. We believe accessibility for people with disabilities is a priority, not an afterthought. We think neurodiversity is a feature, not a bug. As we share the air with each other, our own breath reminds us that the self is common to both humanity and to the earth. Listening to our body, we learn that work is a practice, not a production. We learn that we are collaborative systems, not silos. We learn that our gut can make a critical decision, when the frontal cortex may not. We learn that our community is a dance, not a data set ;-) .

    Fishfood Principle

    We believe that we value differently.  You may value the deep satisfaction of putting money to work. I might value:  food and shelter. Learning. Accomplishment. As we work, we each listen to what we truly value and then can create this blended value through projects. As schools of fish, we create fishfood for all. Our revenue model is designed for diversity.

    Working Out Loud Principle

    We are as open and transparent in our work as possible to be highly efficient with resources, and allow more people to benefit from the work created. Many of us contribute to open source development, and Dreamfish is built with open source software. Working out Loud allows one coworker to easily learn from another coworker (e.g., on how to use a tool, how to run a meeting or manage a project). This is also why our main workspace is a wiki. If you want a private space, you are welcome to create one. This may take some adjustment, if you have worked behind a wall for awhile. But, those of us who have made the transition, find this new way of work liberating!

    We practice the work we want in the world:

    Guidelines are agreements that we make to our coworkers.

    We practice Respect

    Each person’s contribution in this community is valuable. We expect for each person to be treated with the upmost regard and respect. We respect people’s time, efforts, and expressions. Please see our Diversity Statement.

    We practice Extraordinary Project Management

    We want a healthy workplace throughout the whole cycle of work, from the early relationship-forming process through project management to project close outs. Project-based work can be an efficient flexible way to get work done. We can keep costs low. To enable this new way of work, we strive towards excellent project management practices. As we are at different skill levels of project management, we teach each other as we learn.

    We practice Effective Communication

    There are things we don’t know that we don’t know. By giving each other feedback, we can become more aware and more effective at work. Our perspectives are often different from each other. We check our own assumptions out directly with the other person. We strive to own our own interpretations and feelings about the situation. If need be, we ask for help to facilitate.

    We practice Responsibility.

    When we leave or disengage from the project, in whole or in part, we do so in a way that minimises disruption to the project.

    We treat creativity as a practice. We love creativity, especially collaborative forms that arise as people work together — from dance to video, from a code snippet to a page on the wiki, from the person who’s been doing this for decades to the person, who just picked up a video camera last week. We support maximum freedom of creative expression, while respecting our work communities. We will never put a limit on creativity just because it makes someone uncomfortable.

    We are learning as we go. We may not be able to satisfy everyone. We may not be able to provide for multiple languages or better accessibility as quickly as we would like. We each can certainly work to avoid offending anyone, and learn. And we can listen carefully and respectfully to each other. We can work together.

    We want a thriving workplace for everyone, everywhere.  We are not bosses and minions. We are not in or out of the workforce. We are not demographic groups. We are not producers and consumers. We’re people working with people.

    Please,  support this humanifesto by adding your name to the list on the wiki.

    ==== Attribution ====

    The context for this humanifesto:

    As a practice of diversity, this text is a remix, with much thanks to Dreamwidth for allowing us to repurpose text in their Diversity Statement. This text is usable under a Creative Commons 3.0 BY-SA license.

    Our relations shape us. Many thanks to everyone who has contributed to Dreamfish on a journey over the last couple years to arrive at where we are now as a work cooperative.  In 2006 in the International Society for Systems Sciences, we began under the name of Dreamfish as a NGO project, to support systems scientists to collaboratively work on issues of sustainability, and democracy. In 2007 – 2009, we engaged thousands of social entrepreneurs to share resources with each other in projects with PopTech and Craigslist Foundation, Fielding Graduate Institute, Organization Development Network, Greenmuseum.org, and Planetwork. Several core dreamfishers meanwhile worked as Touchy-Feely group facilitators for Stanford Graduate School of Business and the Women in Management program. Now, as a community, we are going to come full circle. Now, with the belief, sweat and effort of a small staff, nearly 100 community members working on projects, 3000 supporters, and investors who believed in this woman entrepreneur (!), we are moving our vision to life.

    If you want to get involved, and volunteer on a Dreamfish project, we are looking for leaders, writers, programmers, operations folks, wiki contributors, investors and funders of open source projects. We are inviting employers who want workers to seed job opportunities to post jobs. We welcome you to join us in building Dreamfish.

     
  • Tiffany von Emmel 10:49 am on March 25, 2009 Permalink  

    Working on Water 

    Work is hard. Work is not fun, or one must work to have fun.

    Really? Time to check out CocoVivo, the island of coworking, where people go to figure out how to live well as they work alongside nature.

    As I think of myself walking in the sand barefoot, or lounging with my laptop in a hammock, my deeply ingrained got-to-hurt work ethic rooted in a Protestant /Chinese/ Irish upbringing niggles at me. I am considering a visit to CocoVivo, to challenge myself. (of course, it would have to be a challenge. :-) sigh.)

     
  • Tiffany von Emmel 3:50 am on April 27, 2008 Permalink
    Tags: , , ,   

    Video of a Sustainability Vision 

    When i saw this video, what struck me was how it tells a story of a future, in which people enjoy life. This video puts our every day experience as central to a vision of sustainability. I think this strategy of making sustainability a personal experience is effective for motivating change. What life do we want to live?

    This video is produced by Bay Area Alliance for Sustainable Communities. The BAASC has brought together organizations and leaders from the nonprofit, government and community to influence policy related to climate change.

     
  • Tiffany von Emmel 5:03 am on November 23, 2007 Permalink
    Tags: , efficiency,   

    Gettting Things Done 

    The day after Thanksgiving, I am getting things done, in a good way :) . One of my favorite people in the world is Eugene Kim , founder of Blue Oxen Associates and a Dreamfish advisor. Eugene teaches the popular Tools for Catalyzing Collaboration public workshop. Eugene introduced me to Matthew O'Connor, a programmer with a talent for influencing me to new frontiers of systematization. One day, they revealed to me the technologist's zen productivity bible, Getting Things Done , aka GTD, by David Allen. Since then, I have bought five of the books for dreamfish, a label maker which I confess that I horde, and lots of recycled manilla folders. Here's Eugene soaking in the wisdom.

     
  • Tiffany von Emmel 6:20 am on November 1, 2007 Permalink
    Tags: , ,   

    Artsfest’s AFTER GREEN Party 

    After the Green Festival on Friday night is AFTER GREEN, a creative party that Dreamfish is co-sponsoring. I hope you will come out for it. The party is put on by artists, will showcase environmental artists, and will benefit Artsfest. Hope to see you there! We'll be social networking :) Tiffany

     
  • Tiffany von Emmel 9:38 am on October 12, 2007 Permalink
    Tags: , , , ,   

    Environmental Art Online Conference: designing online space for collaboration 

     

     

    Sam Bower, Executive Director of greenmuseum.org, just emailed me while he was participating in an online conference on Environmental Art, led by Caffyn Kelley. There are some lively concurrent sessions in chat rooms and excellent resources, discussion and images, like the one Sam posted above. it's free and easy to join in. If you are new to environmental art,it is an inspiring field to learn about multicultural collaboration for sustainability, with artists, scientists, researchers, parks procurement people, activists. And learn about online networking. Sam emailed me, because I am nose deep right now in designing the new site for Dreamfish (which is why I have been not as active recently here! ) and am looking at best practices for social networking for good. If you go the conference, please tell me what you think of the online space and tools that you find helpful. Check the conference out …

     
  • Tiffany von Emmel 12:47 am on July 14, 2007 Permalink
    Tags: green, green for all, , ,   

    Connect to the power of Van Jones 

     

     

    Friday, July 13, 2007. Paul Loper and I carpooled to the meeting of NTL in Oakland, California. NTL, founded in 1947, is a group of professional consultants and leadership educators, a group which has a strong commitment to social justice, and is skilled in experiential learning and social psychology. I went to the meeting to connect with friends, and to be moved by Van Jones. I have listened to Van many times and have deep respect for him. I have been moved to tears with him at the Green Festival (see the video).

    "I want to thank you" Yes, Van Jones was billed as "speaker" and he did speak, but when Van speaks, Van is a mover. Van moved physically, embodying every emotional phrase of his stories. Van moved the crowd, emotionally – "You, you are the people that help people…and I want to thank you for doing what you do". My neighbor's cheek was wet with tears.

    And, he moved me. Van moved me to step up to move beyond "really, really, small dreams".

    "Pop a couple Advil and watch an Inconvenient Truth" His wake up call is that we have global problems – global warming, globalization's economic problems, and global conflict. If we don't act, in as little as 10 years, the ice which reflects back into the universe 90% of the sun's heat will disappear and then our planet will absorb that heat. In this moment of our history, it is up to each of us to step up and get courageous. But, pointing fingers is not the answer.

    Deep down, we must address also the spiritual and psychological crisis of the self. "It is much easier to confront the persecutor and polluter without and much harder to confront the persecutor and polluter within". As he spoke transparently about the moments when he felt little and scared, he made his body small, hunkering down. My mind then went to the moments when I feel little and scared, as moments when I carve out small dreams and pools to lead in. As he stretched out his arms wide and stood tall, I stood also for the world. When I fear, I think small. When I love, I act big.

    "Clean energy jobs build"
    The big solution which Van is bringing to Washington D.C. is that a green economy will address two of the critical global problems – environmental and economic. To retrofit the U.S.'s buildings for energy conservation, install solar panels on every home, create the green infrastructure – these are all JOBS. Jobs that unemployed young people can learn. Jobs that are empowering and leaderful, where youth can learn and expand their choices while making a critical difference to our global survival. Locally, as the president of the Ella Baker Center in Oakland, and nationally with Nancy Pelosi, Van is moving forward "green jobs, not jails".

    "Connect leaders of all kinds"
    Van moved the core of my heart when he spoke of our need to connect as catalysts from many paths, in order to come up with new solutions beyond what we know and do now. This is a time when it is not enough that we lead as individuals, experts, professionals. The leadership we need now is to connect leaders of all kinds, so that we can take it to a new level. "Let's connect you!".

    After Van's speech, we had an Open Space activity, in which people self-organized into small groups. I was struck by how in each of these small groups, the power of Van had taken effect. In our group, we talked about how to share transformative stories about the environment.

    When we reported back to the large group, we performed a skit of "Zip-Lock Bag Anonymous", and confessed struggles and small steps to not use plastic bags, plastic bottles, bathroom paper towels, Bounty towels. As people fessed up to the laziness of forgetting our canvas bags when shopping, and the fear in avoiding to watching an Inconvenient Truth", the crowd laughed and nodded as they listened.

    As we nod to our littleness, we then take the step to act from the bigness of our love for the world.

    I am moved to say, Van Jones, "I want to thank you".

    May we together bring forth a just, sustainable healthy world,

    Tiffany

     
  • Tiffany von Emmel 2:12 am on May 23, 2007 Permalink
    Tags: , , ,   

    Van Jones meets NTL Event, Friday, July 13, Oakland 

    This email was sent to users with the following roles: authenticated user

    Friday, July 13th, Oakland, California. NTL Institute will host a pubic 2007 Member Meeting at the Waterfront Plaza Hotel. The meeting will be held on Friday, July 13. Come on out! Charlie Seashore and I are swimming over to flip our fins. Hope you can make it.

    Here's the kicker. The world of community and organization development meets the world of green social activism. The rockin' cross-pollinating catalyst, Van Jones, will speak. And then, we'll breakout into small groups for discussion.

    Van Jones is founder and president of the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights. A 1993 graduate of Yale Law School he has received many honors including the 1998 Reebok International Human Rights Award, the international Ashoka Fellowship, selection as a World Economic Forum “Young Global Leader,” and the Rockefeller Foundation “Next Generation Leadership” Fellowship. If you haven't seen Van before in action, I can testify that he mobilizes the courageous heart to action.

    In a recent interview for CityFlight.com, Van said “I don't believe that the changes that we are now seeking in society can be realized by any one small subgroup struggling alone. You're talking about major ecological crises, from climate chaos to the end of cheap oil to species extinction on a massive scale, and also radical social inequality, with a widening gap between rich and poor and racial antagonisms just below the surface. And we're facing a generalized deepening sense of despair in many sectors of society, both rich and poor. Clear-thinking, big-hearted people from all groups need to start working together to address this triple crisis.”

    Now, the part about this meeting being PUBLIC really tickles me, because NTL(national training laboratories) has been an invitation-only member organization founded in 1947. NTL, founded in the work of Kurt Lewin, social psychologist, is known for outstanding public workshops on diversity and birthing interpersonal dynamic laboratories, particuarly T-groups. NTL is the mother ship for the field of applied behavioral sciences, and the ancestral origin point for generations of facilitators, including me. Admittedly, as an open door interactivist, I prickle at closed door policies, when it comes to fields that are about collaboration, participation, sharing. So, I applaud the choice of OPENness. And, I will be excited to be there to applaud NTL meets Van Jones!!…

    Thank you Kathleen Brown for organizing and sending this heads up.

    Read the event details here

     
  • Tiffany von Emmel 10:59 am on April 7, 2007 Permalink
    Tags:   

    what can I do about climate change? 

     

     

     

    Surfing my email this morning, I read "Climate Change is a challenge to the field of organization development (or insert your profession here) What can we do?", on a listserv from Organization Development Network. It was uttered by Bill Gellerman. Yep, I agree with Bill.

    I think there are different levels that we can work at, and all are valuable and a difference that makes a difference.

    1. practical – When engaging a social system (society, organization, community, network) , encourage the inclusion of the environment as a stakeholder – To give you an example, some dreamfishies are doing an Appreciative Inquiry for Sustainability project, in which we use the arts as processes to interview organizational members (humans being fundamentally interconnected and part of our larger ecosystem) about how Dreamfish's vision and strategy should include the environment. The project serves also as research into how to include environment as stakeholder and as a service learning project, for fifteen consultants to learn by doing.

    2. personal – Learn and do. There are over 1300 climate change events in the U.S. on April 14th and Earth Day on April 22. Lower your personal ecological footprint. Calculate your footprint at Myfootprint.org. You can offset the carbons produced from your car.

    3. professional – If you are self-employed or manage an operational unit or you have work expenses, lower the ecological footprint of your own business, become carbon-neutral (see examples below), and then teach your client groups or other people how you do it.

     

    4. theoretical – Social researchers, let's roll up our sleeves! The models and theories that inform the professions are human-centered, and need some serious rehauling at the level of what is reality and knowledge. I find that researching the linkeage between subjectivity, knowledge-creation and social environmental justice is a powerful leverage point to then work out new ways of practice.

     

    So, how do you answer this question, What can I do about climate change?

    Please use the comment tool below to comment…

     
  • Tiffany von Emmel 4:11 am on February 28, 2007 Permalink
    Tags: balle, , ,   

    BALLE conference, UC Berkeley, May 31-June 2, 2007 

    Let's BALLE! Business Alliance for Local Living Economies, is an international alliance of independently operated local business networks with more than 12,000 members dedicated to building Local Living Economies. BALLE envisions a sustainable global economy made up of Local Living Economies that build long-term economic empowerment and prosperity through local business ownership, economic justice, cultural diversity, and environmental stewardship.

     

    The lineup of speakers is ballecious…

    • Kenny Ausubel, Bioneers
    • Bo Burlingham, Inc. Magazine; author, Small Giants

    • Michael Dimock, Roots of Change Fund

    • Malaika Edwards, People's Grocery

    • Laury Hammel, Longfellow Clubs, author, Growing Local Value

    • Paul Hawken, Natural Capital Institute

    • Jeffrey Hollender, Seventh Generation

    • Van Jones, Ella Baker Center for Human Rights

    • David Korten, Yes! Magazine, author, The Great Turning

    • Winona LaDuke, Native Harvest

    • Michelle Long, Sustainable Connections of NW Washington

    • Jeff Mendelsohn, New Leaf Paper

    • Joanne Neft, Placer Grown

    • Denise O’Brien, Iowa Secretary of Agriculture, Candidate 2006

    • Paul Saginaw, Zingerman’s Delicatessen

    • Simran Sethi, Ethical Markets

    • Don Shaffer, BALLE, Comet Skateboards

    • Michael Shuman, author, The Small-Mart Revolution

    • Jack Stack, SRC Holdings, author, The Great Game of Business

    • Judy Wicks, White Dog Cafe

    For conference info, visit BALLE, livingeconomies.org

     

     
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