[Download] "Doing Democracy with Circles" by Jennifer Ball, Wayne Caldwell & Kay # Book PDF Kindle ePub Free
eBook details
- Title: Doing Democracy with Circles
- Author : Jennifer Ball, Wayne Caldwell & Kay
- Release Date : January 01, 2010
- Genre: Politics & Current Events,Books,
- Pages : * pages
- Size : 9465 KB
Description
Planning what will happen in a community involves bringing together many different perspectives, so that planners can make informed decisions. Whether the concern is land use, the environment, or social issues, the planning process provides a framework for discussing the complex issues involved with change. The goal is to make decisions that lead to a desirable future—one that everyone can embrace.
The authors of Doing Democracy with Circles have found Circles to be very effective for discussing public planning issues, and they draw on their personal experiences in a vivid story of true community participation in dealing with common issues.
"This little book will challenge you to get more experience than you have, to appreciate 'traditional' ideas in fresh and innovative ways, and to try new approaches and techniques as well. You’ll find it all deceptively simple! What, after all, could be more simple than sitting in a circle and listening? What could be more profound than sitting in a circle with others who care as much as you do—about a question, an issue, a threat, or an opportunity—and then listening together as you try to explore what really matters, what really counts, what really can happen now?
"This book presents no cure-all technique and no quick fixes … it presents an approach, a social technology, a do-able, understandable, non-threatening way that planners can learn along with concerned community members about issues that concern them. The “circle” approach provides more path than technique, more instructive and enlightening ritual than method, more a way to bridge understanding and action than a narrow problem-solving gimmick—all because circles encourage not just voice but listening, not just initial opinions but deeper insights, not just 'what I want' but 'what we can do together.' … I can only welcome this striking and useful little book providing thoughtful, practical alternatives to traditional processes of public participation."
-From the Introduction by John Forester, Cornell University
Here is the definitive guide on circles with planners in mind. Primal and potent in equal measure, the circle is the basis for all good conversation. It is well nigh indispensable today for those practicing planning as collective communicative action—whereby common, meaning-filled places get made….
"This is a timely call for planners to consciously “circle” their praxis ... to realize fuller, fairer processes—and to facilitate a “democratics” that can transcend mere politics and contribute to a more just society."
- Ian Wight, City Planning, University of Manitoba
"For me, the circle process was a very beneficial learning experience. I developed a whole new approach to my mediation skills that I have been able to use in a wide range of everyday situations."
-Phoebe Kilby, Vice President, Sympoetica, Woodstock, Virginia
"The planning profession needs more creative and effective ways to engage the public in planning for their communities. Doing Democracy with Circles provides not just a new method but a new philosophy about creating community collaboratively. I have experimented with circles in several planning projects, including a comprehensive plan, developing revisions to a historic preservation ordinance, and resolving a controversy over a private development proposal. I used elements of circles as well as a more pure form of circle. All worked better than any other type of public process I have tried.
"Circles are a place where democracy occasionally breaks out. Thanks to the authors and the whole gang at Living Justice Press for putting together this wonderful book! It will be a great catalyst to enlivening a conversation that is much needed in thousands of neighborhoods across this land."
-Howard Vogel, Hamline University School of Law and Dispute Resolution Institue, St. Pa