A opportunity may open up, to work on how how a collection of environmental groups consider environmental equity as integral to their practice. This post is some early thinking about how to address this opportunity. The context. The groups are part of a not-for-profit collective organized to advance climate-change initiatives in Evanston. Groups run their … Continue reading Notepad: Thinking through how to teach environmental equity
Monthly update (August): Be present and do stuff.
What gets lost in my weekly thinking-out-loud routine here is the through-line of activity generated by Environmental Justice Evanston (EJE), the group with which I became associated earlier this year. A lot is happening behind the scenes and I want to honor that work. For what it accomplishes in environmental justice, and for what it … Continue reading Monthly update (August): Be present and do stuff.
Asset Based Community Development, design justice, and signals from the universe
Sometimes you just need to listen to what the universe is telling you. Stay with me on a short side trip before I get to the main point of this post. I recently was recommended a book by author Peter Block that opens by honoring the influence of John McKnight and the ideas behind Asset … Continue reading Asset Based Community Development, design justice, and signals from the universe
The limitation of relying on a single style of community meetings
Earlier this week I attended another open session of Evanston's Environmental Equity Investigation (EEI) project. It was unfortunately sparsely attended (my perception) by community members. Maybe 10-15 community folks, about 1/3rd the participation of a previous session. Unfortunate in part because the session was well designed and facilitated and could have easily accommodated 40-50 real … Continue reading The limitation of relying on a single style of community meetings
What are the citizen collaboration opportunities?
That question was one of my notes in reading Peter Block's Activating the Common Good - Reclaiming Control of our Collective Well-being. This was a weirdly serendipitous read, recommended by a friend and occasional colleague with whom I share professional interests in learning and change. (More on the weird part, at the end of this … Continue reading What are the citizen collaboration opportunities?




