Connecting: A Relational Approach to Re-rooting Communities, Public Services, and Politics
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Chapter › peer-review
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The Future of Progressivism: Applying Follettian Thinking to Contemporary Issues. ed. / Margaret Stout. Process Century Press, 2019.
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Chapter › peer-review
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TY - CHAP
T1 - Connecting: A Relational Approach to Re-rooting Communities, Public Services, and Politics
AU - Bartels, Koen
PY - 2019/4/29
Y1 - 2019/4/29
N2 - In the face of a widespread sense of disconnection, we need to urgently rebuild our social and political relationships on very different foundations. However, whilst there might be a shared sense that something is very rotten at the heart of how we organise ourselves, there is no widespread understanding of what such foundations might look like or what it takes to bring them into being. In this chapter I present findings from ongoing action research suggesting that the practice of Tree House Liverpool, a neighborhood-based community organization, might have something to offer here. Drawing on the work of Mary Follett and others, I show how Tree House is ‘connecting’ people to themselves, others and their environment by creating enabling environments in which people gain greater appreciative understanding of their capacities and relationships. I evaluate the local impact of this relational approach and its potential for contributing to an understanding of how we might face up to the urgent challenge of re-rooting disintegrated communities, weak democratic systems, and dysfunctional public services.
AB - In the face of a widespread sense of disconnection, we need to urgently rebuild our social and political relationships on very different foundations. However, whilst there might be a shared sense that something is very rotten at the heart of how we organise ourselves, there is no widespread understanding of what such foundations might look like or what it takes to bring them into being. In this chapter I present findings from ongoing action research suggesting that the practice of Tree House Liverpool, a neighborhood-based community organization, might have something to offer here. Drawing on the work of Mary Follett and others, I show how Tree House is ‘connecting’ people to themselves, others and their environment by creating enabling environments in which people gain greater appreciative understanding of their capacities and relationships. I evaluate the local impact of this relational approach and its potential for contributing to an understanding of how we might face up to the urgent challenge of re-rooting disintegrated communities, weak democratic systems, and dysfunctional public services.
M3 - Chapter
SN - 9781940447384
BT - The Future of Progressivism
A2 - Stout, Margaret
PB - Process Century Press
ER -