Difference between revisions of "Meeting notes"
Efeinblatt (talk | contribs) |
Efeinblatt (talk | contribs) m |
||
| Line 120: | Line 120: | ||
*clarify differences between rural and urban environments/farm culture | *clarify differences between rural and urban environments/farm culture | ||
*Lomax investigated music as embodiments of different economies - participatory or expert based | *Lomax investigated music as embodiments of different economies - participatory or expert based | ||
| − | *Heart of England Forest (https:// | + | *Heart of England Forest (https://bit.ly/3fbEZ0x) |
=== <u>July 7th, 2020</u> === | === <u>July 7th, 2020</u> === | ||
'''Reaction to "Building Relationships & Power for Transformation"''' | '''Reaction to "Building Relationships & Power for Transformation"''' | ||
Revision as of 07:40, 8 July 2020
–Notes are in chronological order from earliest to latest–
May 12th, 2020
Reactions to the readings on ‘First Nations Resistance and Climate change’ and other thoughts ....
- Sovereignty versus practical realities of living
- Decolonization
- Indigenous prophecy meets scientific prediction
- Resolving generational trauma
- Reconnecting - The crux of Westernization - Creating spaces to reconnect to our bodies and to the Earth
- Trust what is emerging
- Sharing experiences (Indigenous and non-Indigenous) from different parts of the world: Latin America/Europe/Africa/North America/Australia
- The role and positive presence of the outsider
- Need for a local, tribal, national, global shared vision allowing for diversity
- Challenging complexity - e.g. Indigenous rights versus green movement
- The need for time .... to pause, reflect and work out directions, draw together differences
- Workers rights and the need to take care of existing workers in a just transition to alternatives. Degrowth will mean less traditional ‘work’ and so the need for something else.
- The role of science in a just transition (multiple sciences not just Western)
- New normal – shared perspectives under lock down - how to capture this
- Bruno Latour’s notion of living on two (or more) different planets (in his book ‘Down to Earth’)
- Certain groups of people being considered expendable
- Exploring communication ...
- We are in a liminal space - of confusion, of messiness, of not knowing where we are or where we are going, lets accept this and allow it to be, so we don't rush to ‘solutions’ that are not meaningful or effective.
- How can we build a nation? What is it and how will we all contribute?
- Being in a container – sharing our own transitions, in touch with principles that are important to us
- How can we ‘re-enter’ in a just way - acknowledging the role that African Americans and others have played in serving others at their own cost - what is their sense of place?
- Building relationships - who each person is, what do you like, love and do
- Flesh out the ways that change can happen and the threats to those changes
- Important that we recognize power and how it is applied
- Patient trust versus the need for action
May 27th, 2020
Reactions to ‘Disaster Capitalism and a People’s response’ and other thoughts
The views and perspectives are still very much from the US or Australia and do not reflect well the experiences from Latin America – how to bring these in? Questioning that the answer to problems with capitalism is socialism – must consider the problems of socialism too especially in Latin America. Need also to question the model of development of the West.
Just transition is still the key thing arising from these materials – taking care of workers in existing systems whilst transforming to new systems
Considering ways in which we can connect with others - global practices and networks - this is a touchable moment
We need to question and consider the role of work – the idea of work, vulnerable workers, essential work, whose work? Who for? The connection between work, knowledge and social cohesion.
The following themes arose in our discussion:
- Just transition
- Work
- Re-balancing power
- Values of success – truth meaning and value
- Capitalism/socialism – nationalism, growth, greed
- Westernization
- Wholeness versus patriarchy and racism
- Political theology of the earth (Katherine Keller)
- Corporations, power and culture
We considered the following action items we would like to include in future meetings:
- Critical friend - someone to help you question your own assumptions and ideas
- Sharing one idea or reading from the two weeks before - if it's a paper please share beforehand otherwise just bring it up at the meeting
- Taking one of the themes above and leading a discussion around this with associated papers, etc. - please let us know if you are interested
- Graphic recording – Holly
- Bring in the work of other networks and meetings and share these with the group - please bring this up each session as appropriate
- Digital place to store readings and links - Jerry/Eric to consider mechanisms
– Critical Friends –
My suggestions are as follows – I've tried to think about overlaps of interests / enough difference to support criticality/ people that don't know each other so well to stretch us. I will think of an activity for our next meeting to use critical friends to get us going.
Caroline/Holly – Jerry/Glevy – John/Eric – Debbie/Melissa
June 9th, 2020
Reaction to "Democracy" (but more specifically to the anti-racism movement)
Reaction to Democracy (with additional emphasis on the anti-racism movement given the timing of the meeting with current events)
The conversation touched on different aspects of democracy, from municipalism to town meetings to indigenous democracy, there was also a significant discussion around anti-racism given the turmoil erupting out of the killing of George Floyd in the USA and the protests that have broken out across the USA and around the world in support of anti-racists reforms, especially with regards to the brutality of policing.
The issue of militancy, which was defined for our group as non-violent radical challenge to the status quo, was brought up but not fully explored as an imperative if anti-racist change is going to get any significant traction, with a sense that without militance, this may all settle back into the same racist realities that much of world is subjected to and is structurally protected from being undone.
Town meetings, a localized form of democracy that brings people together to engage in dialogue as a key component of the decision-making process, where town residents are encouraged to come and share perspective before they each vote on key issues involving the town, was shared noting this continues to exist in rural communities but is hard to find in urban settings.
Indigenous democracy is an inclusive process that focuses on listening to all voices, respecting the different needs and perspectives but also embracing the importance of looking beyond individual needs to the community needs and, more importantly, to environmental needs... allowing people to consider the important decision-making role not just on what is best for the people but what is best for the planet (local environment and beyond). The listening to each other and the planet, and responding to what is learned from listening rather than what is desired for oneself, especially by those at the top of the hierarchy, is essential to this form of democracy.
Frustrations were shared around the perpetuation of power and privilege, whether it be by privileged students questioning the political motives of professors who expose inequities of privilege or by liberals advancing their own interests and causes upon other contexts they have the resources and interest to influence, even if their understanding does not correlate to their judgements.
Municipalism, from the readings, was raised as a growing counter to centralized democracy, noting its ability to address the most urgent and relevant needs of the city. There was general agreement that neither local nor central governance holds the key and neither should be “fetishized”. That led to sharing of the string vest theory, which highlights the balance needed between central governance (string) and local governance (spaces between the string). It was a nice metaphor for understanding the need for a balance that at a certain point, you can have too much space or too much string, thus compromising the intent behind the string vest.
We had a chance to connect in breakout rooms with our critical friends, this being the first chance to connect for many and thus more a chance to get familiar with each other than to go deeply into the topic.
Action Items
- We agreed to stay with the reading assignments but as we did this week, to feel free to pull pertinent topics into the discussion.
- Eric is currently setting up a wiki page that will allow us to post articles and videos relevant to our group that will be easily accessible.
- We are all encouraged to share content we think will be helpful to the group.
File:Reset 3 notes optimzed.pdf File:Reset 3 notes optimzed.pdf File:Reset 3 notes optimzed.pdf File:Reset 3 notes optimzed.pdf File:Reset 3 notes optimzed.pdf File:Reset 3 notes optimzed.pdf
June 23rd, 2020
Reaction to "A New Economy"
- New Internationalist community journalism project in Newcastle
- Plaine Commune in Northern Paris Suburb
- Hilary Wainwright (paper linked to in readings section)
- need to balance centralization/decentralization in communal/autonomous social formations - UK response to Covid-19 is too insulated from local conditions and centralized while US response is fragmented and decentralized
- Pioneer Valley Cooperative Farm in Northampton, MA is a worker-owned farm with 7 members on 4 acres (https://pvworkerscenter.org/coop-farm/)
- Highlander Center in Tenn. is a social justice leadership and training school (http://thehighlandcenter.org/)
- Argentina's Recovered worker-owned Factories embedded in communities and offering community services e.g. health services, popular education courses, libraries, performance spaces, etc.
- Mondragon Corporation is a federation of worker-owned cooperatives in the Spanish Basque region
- transitional horizons to soft power
- how has our internalization of capitalism impeded our ability to create alternative political/social/economic structures?
- The economy is a term for how people relate to each other and the world around them in order to support a full and meaningful life
- localization of economy
- motivation of growth can be different than profit
- hierarchical and patriarchal construction of communes in Venezuela. Movement came from top down. Women's groups already practicing communal principles
- organic approach as opposed to orchestrated approach to change
- research that doesn't reflect experiences at local level cannot create change
- theory — value — action
- Gramsci's organic intellectual
- clarify differences between rural and urban environments/farm culture
- Lomax investigated music as embodiments of different economies - participatory or expert based
- Heart of England Forest (https://bit.ly/3fbEZ0x)
July 7th, 2020
Reaction to "Building Relationships & Power for Transformation"