Michelle Strutzenberger

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CA

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Hello,

I recently had the privilege of interviewing Gord Tulloch, director of innovation for posAbilities, an organization that works with people who have an intellectual disability in Vancouver. The organization has just received a grant to partner with three local, like-minded organizations to create and scale an effort to build social capital in their city. PosAbilities has been weaving ABCD quite heavily into its work and this past year hired Joe Erpenbeck, formerly of the ABCD Institute, to act as a lead connector. Here's a recent brief story on the proposed new effort:

Four orgs partner to scale promising efforts that build social capital

McConnell Foundation grant highlights efforts possibilities

Four organizations working with people who have a disability have united to intentionally create and scale efforts to build social capital in Vancouver. A McConnell Foundation grant will support their efforts.

The organizations include posAbilities, the Burnaby Association for Community Inclusion, Powell River Association for Community Living and Simon Fraser Society for Community Living.

PosAbilities has already been working for the past year on unique initiatives to build meaningful, caring and reciprocal connections and relationships in neighbourhoods and communities.

The McConnell Foundation grant allows the organization to take what it has learned and invite others to join so that a larger network can develop the capacity to work in similar ways in neighbourhoods and communities.

PosAbilities director of innovation Gord Tulloch says hes heard people claim to already be effectively building community but hes convinced theres ample opportunity to accelerate and bloom these efforts. I think what we do is a very pale version, a very timid version, of whats possible, he says.

He points out that even with 40 years of talking about the importance of community integration and inclusion, we still find it difficult to create meaningful places of belonging in neighbourhoods and communities for persons with disabilities.

The new Include Me initiative with Community Living BC, which measures quality of life for people who have a disability, consistently shows that the weakest area, throughout the province, is in social relationships and connectedness.

Gord suggests a key barrier is that the tactics used by the social services sector have tended to be very professional, very service-oriented kind of models and they dont work in community.

In contrast, this new effort will involve hosting dialogues in neighbourhoods and communities. They will aim to distil the notion of neighbourliness and also explore how we can transition from our nostalgia around that to practice.

People will be coming up with specific, actionable ways to foster more care, inclusion and hospitality in their neighbourhoods. In another initiative, posAbilities partnered with Little Mountain Neighbourhood House, which provides a range of cultural and social program to the community of Little Mountain/Riley Park, to run a community camera project. Those living in the community captured images of places that represent community strength and safety, as well as places that could use some change.

Many such experiments will comprise the larger effort, with the intent of identifying strategies that can help grow and thicken the connections and relationships in neighbourhoods and communities, Gord says.

The McConnell Foundation grant is very welcome in supporting this effort, he adds, noting the foundation has been interested in social innovation, resiliency and sustainability for some time. To get some acknowledgement from them is a big deal for us and also speaks well of the project, that it has some legs, Gord says.

You can comment on this story below, or e-mail michelle(at)axiomnews.ca.

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Axiom's Journalism and ABCD


By Michelle Strutzenberger, 2013-09-18

Axiom News just published a blog on our journalism and the influence of ABCD, which I'm reposting here. Interested to hear thoughts.

Axiom's Journalism and Asset-based Community Development

In a recent video interview with the Canadian collaborative, Social Innovation Generation, John McKnight tells the story of the origins of asset-based community development and how it emerged out of his anger at the predominant research then being conducted on neighbourhoods, especially low-income neighbourhoods.

He found the research influencing those concerned about such neighbourhoods zeroed in on a communitys deficits from the number of teenage pregnancies and lead poisoning stats to the prevalence of low-income housing. People who said they cared about these places were led to think about them as though there was nothing there that was useful, says John.

Coming from a former role as a neighbourhood activator and knowing a different story existed, John says he felt offended enough to undertake a different kind of research. He began documenting what existed in the neighbourhoods, what people had themselves and in the community that they used to solve problems and get things done.

That defiant decision to research in a different direction has since bloomed into a worldwide community of practitioners and researchers dedicated to a similar approach.

Some years back this approach also found resonance with Axiom News founder Peter Pula who created his company because he wanted to read a different kind of news and was already heading in the direction of journalism that surfaced a communitys strengths rather than its deficits.

By all I know of asset-based community development, today we are practicing a form of it as journalists rather than consultants. Where we depart, somewhat radically, is in focusing on the communities found in workplaces as opposed to place-based neighbourhoods. But isnt it true that, just like that of low-income neighbourhoods, the dominant story of business, in particular, has become one about deficits?

Like asset-based community development, we are intent on telling a different story not by green-washing or whitewashing -- but by making a constant effort to amplify many different voices that make up these workplace communities. In amplifying those voices, we intentionally aim to highlight peoples gifts, to show whats energizing them right now and to invite them to think about new possibilities.

We do so with the hope and intent of sparking new connections and activity in those communities. We think Johns premise that you can measure the growth of social capital by counting new relationships and the number of new people engaged in voluntary associations (as opposed to institutions), is just as relevant in workplace communities as neighbourhoods.

We also seek to shape our editorial decisions including what we cover, what we provide an opinion on and what that opinion is from an asset-based perspective. And we see our own team as a community and have made attempts to work from the same approach.

If you have enough small stuff thats right, the big stuff will change; we know that from movements, John says in the Social Innovation Generation interview, recounting the story of the university students who made the seemingly small decision to eat at a whites-only diner in 1960, precipitating a massive amount of experience and understanding that had been bubbling at the local level, under the radar, so to speak. All of a sudden they provided the trigger that brought all that small growth into public view, says John, referring to the civil rights movement.

Everything important that changes is from small stuff, but it usually needs a precipitator, John says.

At Axiom News, we see ourselves as engaging in the small stuff hunkering down with the rest of the community members with which we have become affiliated. If you read many of our stories, you will understand what I mean. They are not the big, global stories of the day; they are not even, in most cases, appearing to be linked to or cognizant of those stories.

But you could say this has become our operating principle in a way that if we keep focusing on getting the small stuff right, the big stuff (in our case the world of organizational life and business) will eventually change and who knows what will be the precipitator?

Originally posted to www.axiomnews.ca.

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