Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Resilience


Neil Thin, in his book Social Progress and Sustainable Design, asks why do we need to be reminded that human well-being is a top priority?  He illustrates this question with the first sentence of the first UN World Summit on Social Development:

For the first time in history, at the invitation of the United Nations, we gather as heads of State and Government to recognize the significance of social development and human well-being for all and to give to these goals the highest priority both now and into the twenty-first century.

In, Thinking in Systems, Donella Meadows pointed out that too much emphasis has been put on the quantifiable.  In terms of development, if we focus too much on what we can count and measure, then only what we can count and measure becomes important and we miss out on the true goal- human well-being.  Instead of focusing on the ends, we end up focusing on the means.  This holds true when too much emphasis is put on macro-economics.  An increase in GDP doesn’t necessarily mean an increase in human well-being.  In fact, it may lead to a decrease in absolute or relative well-being, especially because disparities between genders, regions, ethnicities, etc. are not taken into account in macro-economic measures.

There has been a recent shift in the development aid community towards resilience building.  This is especially true in the Sahel area of Africa where droughts and famines are common.  Aid in this region has focused on lessening the burden of shocks such as droughts and famines, rather than empowering households and communities to bounce back themselves.  In Ending the Everyday Emergency: Resilience and Children in the Sahel, Save the Children and World Vision emphasize that focus needs to be brought to the problems of food insecurity and malnourishment on a long-term basis, not just during crisis.  They propose the following ways to overcome the resilience deficit:

·         Make reduction of child under-nutrition central to resilience
·         Harness small-scale agriculture for resilience and improved nutrition
·         Invest in social protection and services for the poorest households
·         Develop a new plan for how the national governments, international donors, and agencies should work together to prevent hunger crisis

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Community Learning & Regenerative Design


This post will discuss the concepts and ideas of community, community learning, and regenerative design discussed by David Eisenberg, Etienne Wenger, Frank Young, and Fritjof Capra.  In my attempt to synthesize their ideas, I try to include real world examples that relate to the concepts explained in the readings and attempt to connect their thinking.
In Communities of Practice and Social Learning Systems, Etienne Wenger introduces the idea of communities of practices- that communities reflect collective learning.  In communities of practice members are “bound together by their collectively developed understanding of what their community is about…members build their community through mutual engagement” and communities of practices have communal resources (i.e. language, routines, tools, styles, etc).  Wenger can also be tied to Capra’s thinking about communities.  Both view communities as living learning systems, but Wenger does so without a biology metaphor.  Communities of practice need to connect with other communities of learning in order to share knowledge to become a breathing, living, social learning system.
Wenger explains boundaries of communities of practice as fluid and come about from “different enterprises; different ways of engaging with one another; different histories; repertoires, ways of communicating, and capabilities.’  Wenger suggests there are four types of brokers between communities: boundary spanners, roamers, outposts, and pairs.  Many organizations recognize the benefits of having roamers, who go from place to place sharing knowledge and making connections, and create roamers through organizational policy.  For example, the United Nations and other large organizations require that staff move to a new post after a certain number of years.  This encourages knowledge sharing and boundary bridging at each country office.
With the widespread use of the internet, communities of practice can now be virtual and global.  The web represents a huge advantage for developing communities of practice as well as bridging across boundaries and linking similar communities that may be widespread globally. 
Frank Young and Keiko Minai’s structural approach to community ecology presented in Community Ecology: A New Theory and an Illustrative Test, view communities as units of evolutionary change uses ‘population health’ as the criterion for successful adaptation.  This moves away from the Darwinian idea of the strongest survive, which has no sense of community.  Essentially, Young and Minai believe that communities have a natural capacity for problem solving and without it communities would cease to exist.
Young and Minai describe structural differentiation as the “degree to which specialized knowledge is ‘stored’ in the diverse occupations and organizations of a community.”  This can be seen as how tightly knit a community of practice is.  Wenger would say that the higher the structural differentiation, the higher the need for brokers to connect communities of practice.
Regenerative design, as David Eisenberg explains in Regenerative Design: Toward the Re-Integration of Human Systems within Nature, goes beyond the popular term sustainable design, which Eisenberg criticizes as only going as far to slow down environmental degradation, to not only stop environmental degradation but to reverse it by integrating design with nature.  Human systems need to be designed to obey the laws of nature- gravity, thermodynamics, biology, and ecology- so that human systems can “co-evolve with and enhance the evolutionary capability of natural systems.”
The John T. Lyle Center for Regenerative Studies at California State Polytechnic University is an example of regenerative design; it incorporates the laws of thermodynamics into its design.  One of the buildings has south facing windows for heating in the winter and shading and evaporative cooling in the summer while another is built into a hill which helps regulate the temperature year-round.  The center also incorporates vegetable gardens, fish, compost, manure, on-site wastewater treatment, and bio-gas digesters into the compound.  The Center for Regenerative Studies is a hands on learning environment which brings Capra’s inner-city gardening project with elementary students to the university level.
Eisenberg says,
“We see that buildings and settlements are not ‘objects’ or assemblages of technologies and materials, but amalgamations and concentrations of many systems with energy and material flows, not unlike living organism with metabolisms (electric lines, solar resources, materials, prevailing winds, soil health, ground water, roadways, social network systems, etc.” 
Like Capra, Eisenberg employs interdisciplinary thinking by using biology as a metaphor for communities.  Both Capra and Eisenberg view communities as a living system; Capra uses the cell as a metaphor and Eisenberg describes electricity, water, materials, etc as the ‘metabolism’ of the community.
Eisenberg also relates design to the natural system by encouraging humans to recognize that “natural systems have the self organizing capability to health themselves- if we let them.”  He suggests that we need to realign our ideals and activities so that both human and natural systems have the ability to self heal.  We can view Eisenberg’s idea of regenerative design as going beyond the idea of community ecology presented by Young and Minai, which focuses on human systems, to integrate human and natural systems into one community.
Eisenberg disagrees with the human ecology view that the environment is everything outside of the community and stresses the need to include the environment and nature into the community.  Young recognizes that the exhaustion of resources and natural disasters are threats to human ecology and that “all current environmental threats reflect the past impact of community activity.”  Eisenberg’s solution to environmental threats is to design using the rules of nature to reduce those threats and to reverse the exhaustion of resources and environmental degradation that exacerbates those threats to communities.  

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Networks

One  major theme I pulled out of Capra's book Hidden Connections, is the idea that all forms of life (at all levels from cells to communities) are comprised of networks and are defined by interactions.
Patricia Shields, a professor at Southwest Texas State University, in A Pragmatic Teaching Philosophy explains five different micro-conceptual frameworks for research which are focused around the type of research question (what, where, when, who, how, why).  Looking at her pragmatic teaching philosophy from  a network/interaction view point, the frameworks can be seen as different ways of dissecting networks/interactions to figure out the what, where, when, who, how, and why.  For example, the formal hypotheses framework is focused around the question 'why.'  The research method used in this framework is experimental or quasi-experimental; the researcher will observe the interactions within a specific community to find a correlation or cause-effect relationship.
Popular economist Steve Levitt uncovered some interesting correlations using the formal hypotheses framework.  In the reaction, A->B->C, he knows C and sets out to find what factors (A and B) cause C.  In his book Freakonomics, he attributed lower crime rates (C) in the early 90s to the legalization of abortion in the early 70s by arguing that unwanted children are more prone to crime and drug use (A) and after the legalization of abortion, a whole generation of unwanted births were averted (B) which lead to a drop in crime around twenty years later (C).  I'm not agreeing with Levitt's theory (it has been largely contested), but it does break down an issue into smaller components (or reactions) to try to explain a phenomena.

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Eco-Literacy

The concept of ecological literacy (or eco-literacy) for short, pioneered by Fritjof Capra, means "our ability to understand the basic principles of ecology and to live accordingly."  In other words, to use ecological principles to build sustainable human communities.  By sustainable human communities, Capra means "social, cultural and physical environments in which we can satisfy our needs and aspirations without diminishing the chances of future generations."

Watch Capra explain ecological literacy on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vohcled-kto

Capra stresses how eco-literacy should be brought into schools through gardening and cooking, but the ideas behind it need to be taken into account on a larger level as well.  One of the principles of ecology Capra stresses is that "diversity assures resilience."  The increasing presence of GMOs is a perfect example of how this simple principle is being ignored. GMOs have decreased biodiversity, making crops more vulnerable to climate change, pests, and diseases, not to mention the unknown side-effects of GMOs on the animals (including humans) that eat them.  "Diversity assures resilience" is a simple principle that has been ignored by the agricultural industry and food policy makers who have been more concerned about present crop yields than the future.

Read more on GMOs and biodiversity: http://gmo-journal.com/index.php/2011/06/17/loss-of-biodiversity-and-genetically-modified-crops/