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Process and flow

March 14, 2007 By Chris Corrigan Facilitation 2 Comments

The pattern of process

I   was out and about today with three Danish friends of mine – my deep mate Toke and new friends Maja and Rowan from the Kaospilots.   We spent the day wandering around Bowen Island taking some deeper teachings and lessons from the land.   One of our conversations today was about energy in the Cirle, and how that is sustained.   Toke picked a path through the woods alongside the Bridal Veil Falls on Kilarney Creek and we watched the water flowing in a pattern over the rocks.   I took this photograph to show that a good process holds energy like the pattern of this waterfall.   The water churns and billows in a constant pattern, but it is not the same water molecules travelling through the patern.   Different water flowing in the container seeks the same stable pattern.

Good process is like this too. A Circle that is well held contains the flow of energy and allows that flow to pass through it.

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links for 2007-03-14

March 14, 2007 By Chris Corrigan Uncategorized

  • Creating a CSS layout from scratch : Subcide
    (tags: howto design reference)

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links for 2007-03-10

March 10, 2007 By Chris Corrigan Uncategorized One Comment

  • The Other Somalia: An Island of Stability in a Sea of Armed Chaos – New York Times
    “You can’t be donated power,” said Dahir Rayale Kahin, the president of the Republic of Somaliland, which has long declared itself independent from the rest of Somalia. “We built this state because we saw the problems here as our problems. Our bro
    (tags: politics somalia community leadershp)
  • Martin Rees on TED Talks
    A beautiful story of our place in the universe and the subsequent moral challenge for humans.
    (tags: astronomy philosophy stories)
  • Creating Passionate Users: Crash course in learning theory
    Brilliant post on emergent learning…food for thought about the role of harvesting
    (tags: community learning artofharvesting patterns organization design)
  • The Change Management Toolbook: Spiral Dynamics (case study)
    Spiral dynamics and peace in Lebanon
    (tags: spiraldynamics evolution peace)
  • What engages employees most or the ten C’s of employee engagement
    A nice little iist for inspiration
    (tags: leadership engagement design)

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Building peace in Somalialand

March 9, 2007 By Chris Corrigan Collaboration, First Nations, Leadership, Organization One Comment

Fascinating article in the New York Times about the norther area of Somalia where people have built peace in an incredibly turbulent region by mixing indigenous governance with democratic participation, using elders and tribal leaders to harness attachment to clans AND to transcendent principles such as independence and peace. Some quotes:

“You can’t be donated power,” said Dahir Rayale Kahin, the president of the Republic of Somaliland, which has long declared itself independent from the rest of Somalia. “We built this state because we saw the problems here as our problems. Our brothers in the south are still waiting – till now – for others.”

…

Its leaders, with no Western experts at their elbow, have devised a political system that minimizes clan rivalries while carving out a special role for clan elders, the traditional pillars of Somali society. They have demobilized thousands of the young gunmen who still plague Somalia and melded them into a national army. They have even held three rounds of multiparty elections, no small feat in a region, the Horn of Africa, where multiparty democracy is mostly a rumor. Somalia, for one, has not had free elections since the 1960s.

…

Somaliland, like Somalia, was awash with weapons and split by warring clans. Their first step was persuading the militiamen to give up their guns – a goal that still seems remote in the south. They moved slowly, first taking the armed pickups, then the heavy guns and ultimately leaving light weapons in the hands of the people. Again, this stood in contrast to the south, where in the early 1990s thousands of American marines and United Nations peacekeepers failed to put a dent in the clan violence.

“We had a higher purpose,” said Abdillahi M. Duale, Somaliland’s foreign minister. “Independence. And nobody in the outside world was going to help us get there.”

…

But the one issue that unites most Somalilanders is recognition. Somaliland has its own money, its own flag, its own national anthem and even its own passport.

“And we have peace, a peace owned by the community,” said Zamzam Adan, a women’s rights activist. “You’d think in this part of the world, that would count for something.”

[tags]somalia, somalialand[/tags]

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The beautiful thought of life in the cold darkness

March 8, 2007 By Chris Corrigan Uncategorized

saturn eclipse.jpg

Ethan Zukerman is blogging from the TED conference.   THe opening keynote was from Carolyn Porco who showed this amazing picture of Saturn eclipsing the Sun.   Ethan write about the moon Enceladus:

More amazing is Enceladus, a much smaller moon, about the tenth of the size of Titan. She shows Enceladus as if it were hovering over Britain (it’s not a threat, she promises” – the moon is roughly the size of England and Wales. It’s got a white, fractured surface lined by geological and tectonic activity.

The amazing part of Enceladus is the South Pole, where these white canals are lined with green – they’re much warmer than the rest of the planet and are rich in organic material. There are jets of fine icy particles flowing out in space, feeding a plume that goes thousands of miles into space above the surface of the planet. These jets suggest that there’s liquid water under the ground on Enceladus, which leads to a planetary trifecta – excess heat, liquid water and organic material, which could be an environment suitable for living organisms.

Porco ends with an extraordinary image – a total eclipse of the sun from the other side of Saturn. What’s most extraordinary, in my mind, is that the haze around the rings comes from those icy particles coming from Enceladus, particles that might represent liquid water, the potential for life, and the strong chance that there could be lots of worlds in the galaxy capable of supporting life.

You can follow along with TED at the  TED blog and elsewhere.

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