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Explaining Cynefin for strategy and decision making

August 13, 2015 By Chris Corrigan Complexity 10 Comments

I have been teaching the Cynefin framework for a number of years now. Like Dave Snowden i learn as much or more from needing to share it than I do from actually deploying it.  I find myself sharing the framework for three applications: strategy and decision making, leadership and basic understanding of complexity.  Because the framework is both simple to describe and supported by a deep set of theory and practice, it is always a challenge to make my description simple enough to be understood, but full enough to be appreciated. So I thought I would put out some step-by-step …

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Embracing theory

August 7, 2015 By Chris Corrigan Conversation, Facilitation, Leadership, Learning, Organization 2 Comments

  This week I have been a part of a series of meetings, gatherings and workshops around the release of a new book on Dialogic Organizational Development.  I contributed a chapter to the book on hosting containers. Yesterday, the lead authors hosted a day long conference on the themes contained in the book and we delivered some workshops and hosted some dialogue on the emergence of this term and the implications for the field. Today we are at the Academy of Management conference being held in Vancouver where the lead authors, and some of the rest of us, are delivering …

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What Vimy Ridge says about who we should be.

July 22, 2015 By Chris Corrigan Uncategorized

I’ve been holidaying in Europe with the family this month – England, France and soon to Estonia.  I haven’t been blogging, just soaking things up and relaxing. But today the kids and I went to Vimy Ridge and it kind of keeps with the theme of some of the reconciliation posts I made here last month. It is said that Vimy Ridge was the event that defined the young Nation of Canada, which was only 50 years old when 100,000 of it’s men, women and children (yes many many soldiers were under age) assembled on the slopes of Vimy Ridge …

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Practical reconciliation

June 7, 2015 By Chris Corrigan Uncategorized One Comment

Yesterday I read Taiaiake  Alfred’s provocative essay on reconciliation entitled: “Restitution is the real pathway to justice for indigenous peoples.” This will probably be a tough read for many people who are bought into the mainstream notions of reconciliation: that it’s about a state level response to specific actions without confronting a fundamental shift in the nature of the relationship  The idea of restitution is a powerful one, and today I’ve been thinking about what that means and why it is exactly the kind of call that should drive home the practical expression of reconciliation.  And I’ve been looking for …

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Reconciliation: a practical guide for non-indigenous people

June 2, 2015 By Chris Corrigan First Nations 6 Comments

Canada’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission reported out this week. It has finished its work, listening to the stories of the survivors of Indian residential schools, promoting dialogue and healing and urging Canadians to understand what is implied by reconciliation. For many Canadians, the TRC’s work will receive a minimal passing notice in their day. They will have heard of it, they will probably know something of the history of residential schools, but they are unlikely to know how the legacy of residential schools plays out in contemporary society. Most non-indigenous people think it was “all in the past.” For most …

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