Re: Cohousing-L Digest, Vol 135, Issue 7 - governance methods in cohousing | <– Date –> <– Thread –> |
From: Diana Leafe Christian (diana![]() |
|
Date: Tue, 7 Apr 2015 21:04:36 -0700 (PDT) |
Hello, This is a response for Virginia Sandman at Virginia Hill Cohousing who asked about the variety of governance systems used by cohousing communities and Liz Ryan Cole of Pinnacle Project who is also interested in this, and Rick Keller of Pioneer Valley Cohousing, who recommends focusing more on management for cohousing and less on governance. For the last several years I've been focusing on what seems like successful and unsuccessful governance and management methods in intentional communities in general, and specifically in cohousing and ecovillages. (Rick, I see governance structures and management methods as distinct but overlapping - please see below). My background is as an informal researcher, workshop leader, and conference presenter on how people start successful new intentional communities and how existing communities can become more healthy and thriving. (I've written a book and articles in Communities magazine on these topics, which some Coho L browsers may be familiar with.) I now believe that how well a community's governance system functions (governance including not limited to its decision-making method) has _everything_ to do with a community's healthy and well-being. And, that a community's governance structure (which includes its decision-making method) is the process by which they conduct the management of their community. I now see governance as the organizational structure of whole-group (plenary) meetings and smaller committees or teams to carry out the community's management functions, which focus on the "what" (not the "how") of decisions - topics about activities that build community life and community spirit; allocating resources of time, money, and community members' labor for the community; building, maintaining, and repairing the community's physical infrastructure, and so on. And their specific decision-making method in these meetings as the "how" (not the "what") they make decisions about these topics. I've also been a consensus trainer for the last 9 years, although nowadays I only recommend what I call the "N St. Consensus Method," which its creator, Kevin Wolf of N St. Cohousing in Davis, Calif., has described in this forum. And I'm now a trainer of Sociocracy, also called Dynamic Governance. I wrote a series of articles for Communities magazine called "Busting the Myth that Consensus-with-Unanimity is Good for Communities," and right now I'm doing a step-by-step series of how Sociocracy / Dynamic Governance can be used in communities. Sociocracy/Dynamic Governance and Holacracy (which I also like a lot) are whole-system governance structures that include a decision-making method, but they are both a whole lot more than decision-making. The various methods of consensus (including with those with a test for legitimate blocks, super-majority voting fallbacks, a super-majority voting decision rule but no approving or blocking, the N St. Consensus Method, the representational Village Council method, the Austrian Systemic Consensus method), majority-rule voting, and multi-winner voting (the parliamentary method), are all decision-making methods but not also governance structures. That's because these focus solely on how decisions are made but not also on the topics to be decided and the organizational structure of whole-community meetings and smaller-group meetings to decide things. Virginia and Liz, I'd be happy to send you (and anyone else who's interested) my handouts on these topics, which are described in the next email (so this email isn't so long). Also, in that email I'll send links to online articles on the variety of governance and decision-making methods used in communities. All good wishes, and please see my next email to Coho L, Diana Leafe Christian
- (no other messages in thread)
Results generated by Tiger Technologies Web hosting using MHonArc.