Changing the Way that Charity Changes the World.

Tag: Philanthropy (Page 3 of 3)

Over 160 Bloggers on the List of Change

Iranian RiotsThanks to CRT/tanaka‘s Geoff Livingston for having
the vision to create the List of Change… and more importantly, the talent to
execute it as a first-class affair. I am very impressed by the names on the
list, but also really appreciate the way that the list aggregates the various
“scores” that demonstrate the reach/impact of a blog.
Metrics for social
change. Imagine that!?!
See the list
here:
My old blog is on it
here, and I’ve submitted this new one.
Please consider adding yours today here.
And consider
subscribing to these blogs so that we can increase their influence. Imagine the
impact of the blogosphere over the coming decade in matters of social
change:
  • Disseminating the
    best thoughts to those who can execute on them,
  • Challenging the
    social sector to lifts its game to the next level in terms of reach and
    impact
  • Inspiring
    philanthropy in the hearts of our neighbors,
  • Catalyzing change
    agents who struggle under oppressive regimes (i.e. the influence of Western
    blogs and social media on the Iranian riots is
    undeniable)
Rally the troops, my
friends. The revolution is underway.

Megacommunity Thinking

Mega-book_triangle[1] Thanks to Stacy Caldwell at Dallas Social Venture Partners for connecting me to the Megacommunity Movement:

From the site:

The megacommunity recognizes the necessity (and power) of business, government, and civil society working together on global issues. 

A megacommunity is a new approach to solving problems which span business, government and the communities in which we live.

A megacommunity is:

    • the space in which complex problems exist, and are addressed
    • an collaborative environment where leaders interact according to their common interests, while maintaining their unique priorities
    • a lens through which we can examine a complex problem in a new way
    • determined by the existence of tri-sector engagement and an overlap in common interest

A megacommunity is not:

    • another form of public-private partnerships
    • another name for corporate social responsibility or philanthropy
    • another variation on conflict resolution
    • another international/intergovernmental forum
    • a really big community of interest
    • a collection of like-minded actors

The objective for each organization operating in a megacommunity is achieved by optimizing its interests instead of maximizing, all participants gain. Best of all, operating in a megacommunity is not a zero-sum game

The Critical Elements of a Megacommunity 
There are five critical elements. The first two, tri-sector engagement and an overlap of vital interests, can be thought of as preconditions.

    • Tri-Sector Engagement must be present in any megacommunity; the noticeable difference between megacommunities and other public-private partnerships is the civil society component, and the ‘open nature’ of the engagement – specifically, not focusing on just the elements the parties can agree on to tackle together, but also those areas that they may not have common ground to work in tandem
    • Overlapping in Vital Interests describes the aspects of any particular issue of which all members have an individual interest – hence necessitating their involvement in the megacommunity

The other three elements, convergence, structure, and adaptability, are critical features of the megacommunity design. An initiative that takes them into account has a far greater chance of success than an initiative that ignores them.

    • Convergence is the commitment to mutual action that all members must work toward; no member can exist in a megacommunity with the intent to disrupt or undermine the effort
    • Structure describes the set of protocols and organizing principles that must exist to allow for converged commitment on the overlapping vital interests – this structure resembles a scale-free network
    • Adaptability is necessary for the megacommunity to function effectively and make progress on the issue itself, and on the individual interests of the participants – adaptability allows the network to be scalable and flexible

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