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Category Archives "Featured"

Recent notes and inspirations from Alicia Juarrero

December 10, 2024 By Chris Corrigan Complexity, Containers, Conversation, Culture, Emergence, Featured, Leadership, Organization, Power

Context changes everything. This used to be a forest.

Alicia Juarrero is the source of so much great thinking on the role of constraints in complex systems. Her two books, Dynamics In Action and Context Changes Everything are brilliant discussions of the role of intention and how constraints shape complex phenomena. They are philosophical texts, and so are slow reads, but well worth the effort. You can find many videos of her sharing her insights on You Tube and elsewhere. She is generous with her time and enthusiastic about her work.

Last week I sat in on a seminar she gave for The Prometheus Project. I expect the video will be up on their “Past Voices” page soon. Here are a few thoughts that struck me from that session.

Dr. Juarrero’s work has been deeply concerned with how intention works as a constraint on action in complex systems. Her thinking underpins much of the way I have learned to think about complexity through Dave Snowden’s work, and most of us who are not philosophers have likely come to her work through Dave.

She used a term in the seminar which I have overlooked in her writings to described stable or coherent phenomena in complex systems: a “constraint regime.” Constraint regimes are phenomena which display coherence even in a dynamic and changing system. Disspative structures like whirlpools are good examples. There is a higher level order imposed on all the water molecules that enter the constraint regime of a whirlpool and they are entrained into becoming a part of that shape. There is nothing inherent about the shape of a water molecule that determines that it would eventually become a part of a whirlpool. This high level order is imposed by constraints on the system that cause the molecules to create a whirlpool shape until they flow through the constraint regime and down the drain. The whirlpool maintains a stable presence until all the water is gone, despite the parts of the system being in constant exchange. Watch some videos of laminar flow to see this stability in astonishing clarity.

This is not a new observation, but Dr. Juarrero’s contributions to this field place the influence of context on constraint regimes into the order of causes for behaviour in a complex system, which bucks the general trend in sciences that only forces between external bodies can cause action. Constraints create coherence in complex systems. Coherence can also look like identity. We are different people in different places. I’ve often used the example that, when gathered with our families, we are very different people than when we are in a business setting or a social setting with friends. There are actions available to us in one context that are not available in another. So context changes everything.

My own work with dialogic containers seeks to understand these phenomena as essentially constrain regimes that emerge out of encounters between people who are making meaning together. When those containers become stable over time – such as in a family for example – they can create dynamics in which our behaviour is highly path dependant, and the paths on which it depends can include the neurological pathways that are activated when we are in a particular context. What we are learning about the neurology of trauma and epigenetics confirms this. Our brain is wired by trauma and influenced by its interactions with environments to produce an identity that has a particular coherence, if not static stability, in particular contexts. When my father was alive and I was in his presence, I was the son of a father, in a relationship that grew and changed over time but had a certain stability. When my father died, I found myself at a loss as the son as a father. Who am I now? And who am I in a teaching environment, singing in a choir, sitting on my own, in the supporter section of my football team? All of these are different containers – constraint regimes – and when we are meaning-making in these places with others I call those dialogic containers.

I like the idea of constrain regimes to describe the class of structures that impart top down causality on a complex system. Dialogic containers are one kind of constrain regime.

In the seminar last week Dr. Juarrero talked about how we make change in complex systems by working with constraints. She had a few great answers to questions about working with constraints. She avoided going down the rabbit hole of working with a definition of complexity, because there simply isn’t one that works all the time, but she did say that the way to work with emergence is through FEEL. We feel when something isn’t right or needs changing and we take action on what feels better. Her pithy advice for leaders is helpful: if things are stable you need to stay in the centre and maintain stability with fail-safe processes. But fail-safe process DO fail, and when they do it is a catastrophic failure, as Dave Snowden says. So when things grow turbulent and more complex (or indeed chaotic) you need to move to the edges and manage in a safe-to-fail way from there, looking for what is coming, working from principles rather than procedures, and attending to the uncertainty. Leadership is context dependant. This is the great lesson of Cynefin as well.

Dr. Juarrero addressed the urge to map systems and try to understand root causes. When presented with a systems diagram – a picture of nodes connected by arrows – she said that such diagrams have some very limited usefulness but they have to be actively interrogated with questions such as:

  • What is in the white space in which the diagram is situated?
  • What is NOT mapped?
  • What is the nature of any given connection between the nodes?
  • What are the nodes? Do they change? How?
  • Is everything I am looking at stable?

Such diagrams also have a very short time limit. Try mapping the traffic on the street in front of you, or a given moment in a soccer game and then drawing certain conclusions from that.

The advice for dealing with turbulence in stability is to develop relational safe-to-fail practice into your system. That makes you better equipped to sense and notice what is happening in the context that surrounds you. The context is so important to the system in which you are working. If things are collapsing inside your system, but the context is stable, you might bring stability to your system from the high order. For example, emergency response relies on stable and predictable interventions being imposed from outside the place of immediate collapse. If your system is stable and the context is unstable, you may find yourself losing your stability quickly and in surprising ways. The fall of the Assad government this week is an example of that. No amount of order and control could overcome the contextual turbulence that caused his family’s regime to fall. Establishing institutional order in Syria is now the challenge facing that country and the region as a whole, because instability exists at nearly every scale in the Middle East at the moment.

If you are working in a stable system that is embedded in a stable context, making change is going to be very hard. Change needs to proceed along the vectors of rule and policy making. Financial systems are an example of this. A chartered bank in Canada operating inside of a well regulated legislative regime, which itself is embedded within a global financial order is essential for the stable smooth functioning of financial systems. Making changes to that system are very difficult and they are highly ordered. Catastrophic change is held at bay by this incredibly stable set of constrains regimes, but when it comes, it comes like a tsunami.

Finally change making in a turbulent system held within a turbulent context is hard, because what you are probably trying to do is seek some order and predictability and it isn’t available. The lives of refugees and migrants and chronically homeless folks who are in motion are like this. With no power to create order, they are at the whims of those that do have the ability to impose order and control. For them, life is a constant state of chaos, sustained that way by a constraint regime that constantly undermines their stability, in some cases out of pure cruelty.

Some of this is new to me, some of it is stuff I know, but am just being reminded of. People like Alicia Juarerro continually keep me learning.

I have time to integrate think about this stuff and will be bringing it into our course on Working in Complexity Inside and Out, where we introduce new material as we learn, test and stabilize ideas about how to work with complexity. The next offering of that course starts in February.

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Remembering them every year.

December 6, 2024 By Chris Corrigan Featured 2 Comments

Anne-Marie Lemay, Anne-Marie Edward, Annie St-Arneault, Annie Turcotte, Maryse Laganière, Maryse Leclair, Maud Haviernick, Barbara Daigneault, Barbara Klucznik, Geneviève Bergeron, Hélène Colgan, Michèle Richard,  Nathalie Croteau, and Sonia Pelletier.

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A free workshop for non-profit leaders in BC

December 4, 2024 By Chris Corrigan Community, Complexity, Featured, Leadership

if you are a non-profit/social services leader in BC, then we would love to have you at a free workshop we’re offering in the new year! It’s about using complexity practices to prepare for and navigate crisis and disruption in our organizations and communities. You can learn more and register at this link.

This work has its roots all the way back in 2020 when Ciaran and I ran a Participatory Narrative Inquiry project for a group of organizations serving people with disabilities about how folks were coping during the early days of the pandemic. We learned a lot from that project it still feels relevant and necessary five years later. This work is being supported by our non-profit partners who want to see more resources and support available to leaders in this sector to find paths through the turbulence of crisis, no matter where it comes from. We’ve created a mini-guide which uses Cynefin as a decision making framework for working in crisis. The mini0guide is available to everyone, and we’re hosting two afternoon workshops in January and February next year (more if there’s interest!) aimed at non-profit leaders in BC to provide a more hands-on introduction to the content and explore practical application together.


Our goal is to build community and provide meaningful, practical, accessible tools that bridge the gap between theory and practice. The workshop is free, but space is limited. If you can’t make those dates/times, click this form where you can sign up for updates about future offerings and future versions of the guide as well. Feel free to comment here with any questions.

Please share this invitation!

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From the Parking Lot

December 1, 2024 By Chris Corrigan Democracy, Evaluation, Featured, Links

Here is my monthly summary of some interesting finds from around the web from November and posted on my Mastodon page.

  • November 1 was All Souls Day. What does that mean now? 
  • Christine Sinclair, the greatest international goal scorer in world football, played her last regular season game for the Portland Thorns tonight. Needing a win to clinch a playoff spot, she did the deed for her club team, scoring the opening goal. Watch these highlights and listen to the sheer noise with every Thorns entry to the box. The passion and love for these players – for this player – is astounding.
  • Cory Doctorow on the inevitable enshittification of Bluesky and why only Mastodon is worthy of social investment. 
  • Listen to Esperanza Spalding and Robert Glasper: Didn’t Find Nothing in my Blues Song Blues 
  • My friend Sarah Jane Scouten, a fellow Bowen Islander, has released a new album of her songs called Transmutations. 
  • A really good analysis of where Conservatism is going in the UK which makes me think about what might happen here if the Conservatives are elected. 
  • Indigenous tribes engineered British Columbia’s modern hazelnut forests more than 7000 years ago.
  • I use a little ritual for closing workshops that comes from the Soweto Mountain of Hope in South Africa. It is a simple set of nine claps that honors ourselves, our communities, and our work in the world. 
  • Chelsey Vowel has updated her excellent 2016 article on territorial acknowledgements. 
  • Canada’s first-ever supporter-owned soccer club – my club – TSS Rovers is offering shares again! Join us in investing in the future of Canadian soccer.  And read Corey Almond’s terrific piece on our endeavour 
  • A beautiful podcast that tracks the experience of being hosted by The Circle, a national organization in Canada that is transforming philanthropy. 
  • A Firsthand Account of What Homelessness in America Is Really Like. 
  • A Matt Webb contemplation on list songs and endings. 
  • Why did Swannanoa become Helene’s ‘ground zero’? Deadly combination of topography, development and a tidal wave of water. 

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What is the Art of Hosting?

November 25, 2024 By Chris Corrigan Art of Hosting, Featured 5 Comments

The “Art of Hosting” is a term that has taken on a life of its own in the world of participatory facilitation and leadership. It came into use some 25 years ago to describe the fundamental practice at the heart of participatory facilitation and it has become a bit of a cipher. I’ve had a couple of conversations in the last few weeks that reminded me that it’s probably time to again bring a bit of clarity – but not too much! – to how the term is used. Here are three things it is and two things it is not.

A pattern of practice

First and foremost the Art of Hosting is an art. Of hosting conversations that matter. The practice is summed up with what we call “the four fold practice” which is derived from the idea that good conversations are made better by having participants be present, participate, be hosted in a way that invites everyone to play a role and to co-create. It’s called hosting to signal that it is a form of facilitation that does not involve itself in the midst of the conversations, but rather seeks to create the conditions for conversations to take place. As a simple practice, it invites facilitators to create the conditions for effective dialogic containers rather than . As a leadership practice, it invites participatory leaders to practice self-hosting, participation, hosting others and co-creation. And because the practice is so context dependant, it is literally a practice. One is constantly practicing, responding, learning and reflecting as a facilitator and a leader who practices the art of hosting.

A community of practice

The Art of Hosting is also a name given to the global community of practice, a loosely connected and chaordic network of practitioners and global stewards. For more than 25 years folks on every continent and in hundreds of different contexts have connected themselves to the Art of Hosting community to share learning, contribute thinking and explore participatory practice through a common language and inquiry. The stewards are experienced practitioners who stay connected locally and regionally and help organize trainings and maintain a global coherence to the community. The global community has an online home at www.artofhosting.org and an active Facebook page with more than 16,000 members.

A workshop

All over the world experienced practitioners offer Art of Hosting workshops giving folks the opportunity to learn and engage with the art of participatory facilitation. Sometimes, especially where the workshop is focused more on community and organizational leadership, it is called “The Art of Participatory Leadership.” While these workshops can offer differ significantly in terms of material offered and pedagogy, in general you will leave these learning experiences having learned about:

  • the four-fold practice of hosting and harvesting participatory process;
  • complexity concepts, such as the chaordic path or the Cynefin framework;
  • Frameworks for planning and facilitating participatory gatherings, such art the chaordic stepping stones of the Diamond of Participation;
  • Exposure and practice of facilitation methods such as Open Space Technology, World Cafe, Circle, ProAction Cafe, Collective Story Harvest and others.
  • Self-hosting and inner practice work

You’ll find upcoming workshops listed on the Art of Hosting website. As I write there are workshops offered in Zimbabwe, India, France, Switzerland, Canada, Croatia, Netherlands, Brazil and the US. These workshops are taught primarily by local stewards and practitioners and can be very different expressions of the same basic material. It’s always fun to travel around and see how folks are teaching and practicing the art of hosting in different cultural and organizational contexts.

Two things it isn’t

It’s not an organiztion. The Art of Hosting is not a company you hire to work for you. It isn’t an organization or a certification scheme. It is a chaordic community that supports learning and practice worldwide

It is not a method. Sometimes people confuse the Art of Hosting with a method like World Cafe. That’s understandable as many people are introduced to participatory methods in Art of Hosting workshops, but there is no Art of Hosting method per se. Neither is the World Cafe, for example, a method of the Art of Hosting. The World Cafe is a method although, as Amy points out below, it is not MERELY a method. The Art of Hosting is a practice that can help facilitators better use that method. It’s like the different between music theory and music performance, or the study of poetics and the practice of writing poetry . One is the theory and the other is the practice, and together the Art of Hosting – the four fold practice – is praxis: the unification of theory and practice towards more participation.

The Art of Hosting is one way we point to what is sometimes spoken of as “the central garden” which is a common space of inquiry held by people who are interested to learn about how participatory ways of being together can help shape a world that values diversity, difference, and multiple perspectives. Thanks to my friend Amy Lenzo, who in the comments, points this out so eloquently.

Does all of this seem only half-way clear? Well, that ambiguity is something of a feature of this whole world. It allows and invites people to bring different expressions and experience to this global inquiry while also having some shared language and concepts that help us to learn together and evolve in the service of groups of people who are trying to build or reclaim spaces of humanity, dignity and sustainability. It continues to be an essential community of friends and colleagues for my work, for which I am constantly grateful.

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Find Interesting Things
Events
  • Art of Hosting November 12-14, 2025, with Caitlin Frost, Kelly Poirier and Kris Archie Vancouver, Canada
  • The Art of Hosting and Reimagining Education, October 16-19, Elgin Ontario Canada, with Jenn Williams, Cédric Jamet and Troy Maracle
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