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How do we build local social capital?
by Dave Pollard
The second part of Nicole’s presentation focused on what we can do, at the local community level, to prepare for and build resilience to cope with this collapse. There are a number of things, she said, we can do personally:
There was considerable discussion near the end of the presentation on “building social capital” and other collective actions we can start taking now, in our communities, such as:
Thanks to Tree, I have had the opportunity to attend several get-togethers of a self-managed community/neighbourhood group in South Eugene OR, which gets together regularly at themed pot-luck dinners and has covered issues ranging from beekeeping to the Transition Handbook. The various Transition Initiative groups I have been involved with, likewise, are drawing community members together to start to deal with these issues (the Vancouver initiative was the key sponsor of Nicole’s presentation). It seems to me that this task of “building local social capital” presents some significant challenges that are preventing and stalling efforts to help us prepare for and cope better as we face economic (and subsequent energy and ecological) collapse:
These are the questions I’m thinking about now, as I ponder what project I should undertake next (beyond completing Collapse! The Game, which I’ll write about again very soon), to help make the world a better place. I have few answers, and expect that the best answers would come from collaborative groups, perhaps in Open Space, tackling them each in turn. (Image above is one of 91 cards in the Group Works deck, developed jointly by more than two dozen experienced facilitators over 3 years to help facilitators and participants to design and enable better meetings, conferences and group collaborations. To learn more about the deck, or get your copy, please visit groupworksdeck.org . [Full disclosure: I am a member of the core team that developed the deck.]) Original article available here |
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