Berto Jongman: YouTube (8:21) Dare to Imagine – Insprinig Short Video on Social Entrepreneurship

Crowd-Sourcing, Design, Innovation, Mobile, P2P / Panarchy, Resilience
Berto Jongman
Berto Jongman

Confucius:  “more than enough is too much”

Ariana Huffington: “the decision-makers are not acting in the best interests of the public”

Voice Over: “socio-economic evolution out of synch with natural evolution”

Joichi Ito: “frugal engineering happens in the absence of abundance”

Many good endeavors still working in silos.  Sharing and cross fertilization not there yet.

Those who have been sideline by power now have ability to by-pass power and connect to all.

Published on Apr 10, 2013

What will the world look like in 50 years? The problems facing our world are so large that they demand disruptive thinking. We don't have time to think in incremental terms. It's time to challenge the status quo, and dare to imagine what we can do.

For more disruptive thinking, sign up for the Skoll World Forum newsletter, at http://www.skollworldforum.org

Jean Lievins: P2P Energy & Metering

05 Energy, P2P / Panarchy, Resilience
Jean Lievens
Jean Lievens

Energy crisis – The path to P2P energy

This is the 1st of a 3 part series by Silvia Garcia Alonso on P2P responses to the water and energy crisis. The text is also available in Spanish on her website.

Energy is the engine of our economy. An economy based on growth that permanently demands larger amounts of energy. During the 20th century, especially during the second half of it, economic growth has come hand in hand with the easy access to fossil fuel resources, something that at that time seemed to be virtually inexhaustible.

Read more.

Net metering – Towards a distributed electrical grid

This is the 2nd of a 3 part series by Silvia Garcia Alonso on P2P responses to the water and energy crisis. Click here for Part 1.

We have already talked about the energy crisis and the need to achieve energy independence through self-generation and the birth of P2P energy networks. At that point we were always talking about communities or households, but the logic applies equally to the distribution and generation of energy in every single country.

Read more.

John Maguire: SEED-Scale and Establishing Local Resilience

Architecture, Crowd-Sourcing, Resilience
John Maguire
John Maguire

SEED-Scale (Self-Evaluation for Effective Decision-making) is a methodology for community-organizing and resilience-building pioneered by the NGO Future Generations. SEED-Scale is a powerful and attractive alternative in an environment presently dominated by the over-professionalized and foundation-funded 501(c)3 Model. Unlike the 501(c)3, SEED-Scale approaches community-organizing from a much different perspective. In many ways it recaptures the spirit of grassroots movements such as AIM (American Indian Movement), and is in important respects similar to the Zapatistas democratic/egalitarian/bottom-up approach in Latin America:

SEED-SCALE offers a solution…It does this by focusing on the one resource available to us all: Human Energy. When human energy is viewed as the essential commodity that will improve lives, individuals are shown to already posses an infinite resource they can build on. Therefore, resourcefulness is the end result, rather than a compulsion for resource consumption. Working with resources already owned—and everyone who is alive owns the resource of their own energy—then technologies, social systems, information, financing will all follow. And if momentum builds around the application of human energy, it will shape to local ecology, economy, and values.

John Robb: Four Things Every Community Should Self-Fund

Knowledge, Resilience
John Robb
John Robb

Couple Uses Massive Lottery Payout to Build Community Infrastructure

By John Robb

Here's a great story.

Mark and Cindy Hill, from Dearborn, Missouri, recently won a quarter billion dollar lottery payout.  What makes them different from the typically lottery winner is that it doesn't look like they will spontaneously combust due to excessive consumption.  Instead, from all accounts, they plan to continue to live modestly and will continue the small town routines that they currently enjoy.  As smart as that is, what makes Mark and Cindy really different is that they plan to invest their money in community infrastructure.  Here's what they are putting their money into the following:

  • A new fire station with better highway access.
  • A ball field for local kids.
  • A sewer treatment plant.

I liked this story a lot.   It got me thinking about what I would community improvements I'd invest in if I had a boatload of extra cash to do so.  I'd do things a bit differently than Mark and Cindy.  My investments would be in productive, 21st century infrastructure.  The type of infrastructure a community needs to have in order to prosper in the future.

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What would that include?  Here's some of suggestions I've covered recently:

I've got LOTs more.  Lots of ways to enable people to do more locally while connecting to the world to find out how.  Thing is, it doesn't take winning the lottery to build this infrastructure.  Almost everything I've listed is something that can be done relatively inexpensively as a bootstrap.  What would be on your list?

Join us.  Become resilient.

Yours,

JOHN ROBB

Anthony Judge: Wholth as Sustaining Dynamic of Health and Wealth

Collective Intelligence, Cultural Intelligence, Earth Intelligence, P2P / Panarchy, Resilience
Anthony Judge
Anthony Judge

Wholth as Sustaining Dynamic of Health and Wealth

Cognitive dynamics sustaining the meta-pattern that connects

Introduction
Varieties of integrative thinking
Elusive nature of the pattern that connects
Experiential implications of wholth
Wholth: Theology vs. Mathematics?
Wholth through mathematical echoes of religious preoccupations
Wholth through religious echoes of mathematical preoccupations
Eliciting wholth through associating mathematics and theology
Engaging with mathaphors, isophors, analogies and correspondences
Wholth as essential to health
Contextualizing wealth as engendered by wholth
Whole and hole in the light of the stealth of wholth
References

Berto Jongman: Free MindShift Seminar Online with Craig Hamilton

Culture, Education, P2P / Panarchy, Politics, Resilience, Transparency
Berto Jongman
Berto Jongman

FREE ONLINE BOTH LIVE AND AS DOWNLOADABLE RECORDING

If, in your deepest hopes and ambitions for a better self and a better world, you’ve sensed that something more is possible–yet has so far eluded us–you’re right.

Activating the Impulse of Evolution

The simple and radical shift that can liberate you from the patterns of the past and unlock the door to an authentic enlightened life.

Most of us assume that the human condition is a fixed state and that we have no choice but to work within it–or fight it every step of the way.

But emerging wisdom is proving otherwise, and that game-changing discovery has yielded a revolutionary path to personal and cultural transformation.

Recommended by Barbara Marx Hubbard, Ken Wilbur, Jean Houston, Brian Thomas Swimme, Michael Beckwith,Terry Patten, and Claire Zammit

Learn more and free online registration.

Patrick Meier: MatchApp: Next Generation Disaster Response App?

Architecture, Crowd-Sourcing, Geospatial, Governance, Innovation, P2P / Panarchy, Resilience

MatchApp: Next Generation Disaster Response App?

Disaster response apps have multiplied in recent years. I’ve been  reviewing the most promising ones and have found that many cater to  professional responders and organizations. While empowering paid professionals is a must, there has been little focus on empowering the real first responders, i.e., the disaster-affected communities themselves. To this end, there is always a dramatic mismatch in demand for responder services versus supply, which is why crises are brutal audits for humanitarian organizations. Take this Red Cross survey, which found that 74% of people who post a need on social media during a disaster expect a response within an hour. But paid responders cannot be everywhere at the same time during a disaster. The response needs to be decentralized and crowdsourced.

Screen Shot 2013-02-27 at 4.08.03 PM

In contrast to paid responders, the crowd is always there. And most survivals following a disaster are thanks to local volunteers and resources, not external aid or relief. This explains why FEMA Administrator Craig Fugate has called on the public to become a member of the team. Decentralization is probably the only way for emergency response organizations to improve their disaster audits. As many seasoned humanitarian colleagues of mine have noted over the years, the majority of needs that materialize during (and after) a disaster do not require the attention of paid disaster responders with an advanced degree in humanitarian relief and 10 years of experience in Haiti. We are not all affected in the same way when disaster strikes, and those less affected are often very motivated and capable at responding to the basic needs of those around them. After all, the real first responders are—and have always been—the local communities themselves, not the Search and Rescue Team sthat parachutes in 36 hours later.

In other words, local self-organized action is a natural response to disasters. Facilitated by social capital, self-organized action can accelerate both response & recovery. A resilient community is therefore one with ample capacity for self-organization. To be sure, if a neighborhood can rapidly identify local needs and quickly match these with available resources, they’ll rebound more quickly than those areas with less capacity for self-organized action. The process is a bit like building a large jigsaw puzzle, with some pieces standing for needs and others for resources. Unlike an actual jigsaw puzzle, however, there can be hundreds of thousands of pieces and very limited time to put them together correctly.

Continue reading “Patrick Meier: MatchApp: Next Generation Disaster Response App?”