Life in Africa

Originally posted to sCNN – the smallChangeNewsNetwork

Life in Africa is an evolving webbed space online for good things, good people and good causes from across the African continent. They’ve been added to the blogroll as NetworkNews and Newmaker.

They need more computers to be able to bring Life in Africa to the world sooner. If you can help with sources of free or inexpensive computers for African community development projects, please let them know! Email to… nankoma4lia(at)yahoo(dot)com

technorati: |

Connecting Hosts and Travellers

Originally posted to sCNN – the smallChangeNewsNetwork

This seems an appropriate way to return from two weeks on the road, exploring England, Scotland and Wales.

Travel is an obvious way for individual friendships and understandings to create good in the world. At servas.org friendly, curious, open-minded individuals can sign up to host or be hosted by new friends from far away places. They’ve got 14,000 individual and family memberships globally, and still counting. It’s run by volunteers, been around for 50+ years, and based on understanding, tolerance and peace. Phenomenal!

technorati: |

Sanity Checks

Am I crazy? Blogger.com has been mysteriously non-functional, some sort of networking problem, for more than 10 days now… but I keep posting anyway, expecting that all might yet be well. And might yet show up at the published end of the web.

Meanwhile, Jill and I are off for a couple of weeks driving and hiking and camping around Scotland and Wales. Lots of borrowed gear (thank you thank you!!!) and expecting to be unplugged for longest stretch since first plugging in, I think. Maybe I’ll kick my blogging addiction? Doubts.

Then, when I get back, I want to study this about corporate blogging. Call me crazy, but I’m convinced that there is a happy marriage to be made between OpenSpaceTech and blogging in businesses.

Currents of Mind

Got this little survey from ChrisCorrigan

You’re stuck inside Fahrenheit 451, which book do you want to be?
The Crucible, by Arthur Miller. Fight fire with fire?

Have you ever had a crush on a fictional character?
Not exactly, but a character in Dandelion Wine or perhaps To Kill a Mockingbird, read in about 7th grade, had a crush on another character that made quite an impression on me. Elsewhere, I got sick for three days after staying up very late reading the executions in Tale of Two Cities. My only sick days in high school. Not sure exactly how the latter relates to the question, though.

The last book you bought is:
The Unconquerable World by Jonathan Schnell, but I’ve been given some others… the new book on World Cafe Facilitation, a series of essays on philanthropy, a draft of a new manuscript on goal-free living, and book of Vaclav Havel’s essays.

The last book you read:
What? You mean like actually finished reading?

What are you currently reading?
Working slowly on the list two questions above, especially the review and comment on the manuscript, at the moment.

Five books you would take to a deserted island:

  • Gray’s Anatomy
  • Words of My Perfect Teacher, Patrul Rinpoche
  • Something about stellar navigation
  • Something about local plants or oceans, fishing or boatbuilding
  • The michener volume on whatever place was nearest by, or perhaps alaska or some other chilly place, just for a little refreshment in the heat.

Who are you going to pass this meme to (3 persons) and why?
Daniel O’Connor, Karen Sella, and Ted Ernst… because I don’t get to talk with them often enough and I think the answers will be very different.

testing

…because this thing has been down, unpublishable, for two days now. it’s turning into one of those tried everything, nothing makes a difference, god if i jiggle it long enough or test it one more time it’s gotta start working again somehow sort of weeks. argh. please please…

UPDATE: a week later and only one cryptic response to my inquiries… after many auto-admonitions to read online FAQs comes the admission that there is some networking problem. this also after i’ve made my hosting outfit check on this three times. no clue when these postings might actually be published. hanging still in this weird space of being able to post but not publish, May 31st and counting…

Omidyar Network: More and More Conference

I’ll be back in Chicago just in time to facilitate this first capacity-building conference for the Omidyar Network community in July. It’s sort of a next generation of the Giving Conference where sCNN was born last year.

Please join us for a three-day event of, by and for the Omidyar.net community and friends — to build our capacity to make good things happen.

What: Discovering Our Power to Make Good Things Happen
When: July 29-31, 2005
Where: Carleton Hotel, Oak Park, IL
Details: http://www.moreandmore.us

Who We Are: Omidyar.net is a new, growing online community. We believe every individual has the power to make a difference. We exist for one single purpose: So that more and more people discover their own power to make good things happen. If you have not joined this community yet, you can go here and check it out.

You’re Invited: This conference is for Omidyar.net members, friends and other curious do-gooders to come together, make connections, have fun, do as much good work as each and every one of us can… and then go home, more connected, energized and capable of doing more and more of whatever we call good in the world. Come join a good party getting better! …and bring your good friends, too!

See the full invitation for more information and registration.

Omidyar Network: More and More Conference

Originally posted to sCNN – the smallChangeNewsNetwork

Please help spread the word about this first capacity-building conference for the Omidyar Network community in July. It’s sort of a next generation of the Giving Conference where sCNN was born last year.

Please join us for a three-day event of, by and for the Omidyar.net community and friends — to build our capacity to make good things happen.

What: Discovering Our Power to Make Good Things Happen
When: July 29-31, 2005
Where: Carleton Hotel, Oak Park, IL
Details: http://www.moreandmore.us

Who We Are: Omidyar.net is a new, growing online community. We believe every individual has the power to make a difference. We exist for one single purpose: So that more and more people discover their own power to make good things happen. If you have not joined this community yet, you can go here and check it out.

You’re Invited: This conference is for Omidyar.net members, friends and other curious do-gooders to come together, make connections, have fun, do as much good work as each and every one of us can… and then go home, more connected, energized and capable of doing more and more of whatever we call good in the world. Come join a good party getting better! …and bring your good friends, too!

See the full invitation for more information and registration.

technorati: |

Small Change

Some interesting things posted this past month at Small Change News. Want to move in the direction of del.icio.us in June, if I don’t go broke on internet access here in London, the most expensive city in the world. Best rate on dialup service is 4p (8�) per minute. Do the math on that for six or eight hours at the machine in a day! Am off now to get a �5 phone card so that I can use dialup service in Chicago. That’s how expensive it is here! But I digress… some good things starting to take shape at sCNN.

Death by Bureaucracy

Originally posted to sCNN – the smallChangeNewsNetwork

This clipping via Lenore Ealy’s Philanthropic Enterprise email list, originally from the Wall Street Journal, 4 April 2005, by Heather Higgins:

With the spirit of Sarbanes-Oxley ever in the air, the Senate Finance Committee will hold a hearing tomorrow on the issue of financial abuses by nonprofits, and will consider draft proposals that would inflict broad new reporting and regulatory requirements on every charity operating in the U.S. This action — which can only be described as overkill — is in response to purported abuses discovered in the tax returns of a handful of philanthropic bodies, mainly involving self-dealing and excessive compensation.

The committee’s own proposal would impose burdens that are well beyond the capabilities of most nonprofits. Of 65,000 foundations, only 46, or 0.06%, have assets over $1 billion. Most have assets under $50 million. And of the roughly 1.4 million public charities, about 94% have annual revenue of $1 million or less; 98% have revenue of less than $5 million. Most are run with small staffs and tight budgets.

These smaller nonprofits are where people with problems often find help, where research and funding begins for everything from AIDS to charter schools, where local communities organize to keep their streets beautiful, protect the environment, return the homeless to productive society and support civic institutions. This is the sector that most often preserves the texture and strength of our communities — and that would be most hurt by many of the current proposals.

As the cost of maintaining tax-exempt non-profit status rises, the net benefit of the tax exemption itself declines. The assumption at the heart of sCNN is that the cost of reporting is already too high for some of the smallest, most active community initiatives and initiators, meaning that we are generally better off if we give directly to these activists.

If we forego the tax-exemption, we also escape the admin costs and the rest of the bureaucracy that does much to kill good works. This doesn’t mean reporting isn’t important, it means in needs to be relevant and useful, like the kind of reporting that gets done in a weblog. It’s a lot more impressive and meaningful to me if somebody is blogging an initiative daily or weekly than if they are filing the right government forms quarterly and annually.

technorati: |

Creating Politics

Originally posted to sCNN – the smallChangeNewsNetwork

More from the mailbag…

I’d like to introduce the Creative America Project, a grassroots civic effort aimed at inspiring and training artists and creative professionals to run for local office. We’re a nonprofit and nonpartisan, but the IRS will very likely turn down our application for 501(c)3 status.

We just did this full-day Saturday training session. We had 30 people and it was a blast!

We don’t have another date set so if you want to get the latest updates on our work, please join our Yahoo email list and visit our website.

Tom Tresser, Chicago

technorati: |

Global Youth Action Network

Originally posted to sCNN – the smallChangeNewsNetwork

This came in by email…

Are you interested in youth movements? Curious how young people in other countries around the world are changing their communities and participating in political processes? Want to travel? Want others to visit you?

The Global Youth Action Network (GYAN) is working in diverse countries around the world to organize tours for young activists, academics, philanthropists, and anyone interested in learning more about the participation of youth in social change.

The first tours will be in Brazil starting on June 23 and another on July 19. Other tours are being planned for other countries as well.

On each seminar we will visit the headquarters and project sites of dozens of diverse youth organizations, learn about their work, and connect with young people themselves to talk about activism from the local to the global level.

GYAN trip leaders will provide translation, facilitate dialogue, and supply background and supplementary information to put the work of the organizations in historical and global context.

GYAN is a global network of youth organizations from almost 200 countries. It facilitates youth participation in global decision-making, supports collaboration among diverse youth organizations, and provides tools, resources, and recognition for positive youth action.

technorati: |

Resources and Networks

Originally posted to sCNN – the smallChangeNewsNetwork

Dean Landsman sent this to Tom Munnecke’s GivingSpace email list:

Just came across these two sites, which I believe will be of interest to many. Politics – Community – Activism – The Voices of Many Communicating with Many – New Activism using New Media/Connectivity/Convergence

Citizen Lab: http://www.citizenlab.org/

Civilblog: http://www.civiblog.org/

Ted Ernst sent this:

Global Voices is an international effort to diversify the conversation taking place online by involving speakers from around the world, and developing tools, institutions and relationships to help make these voices heard. The world is talking. Are you ready to listen?

Check the rolls in the sidebar.

technorati: |

MeshForum

Finally catching up on details after MeshForum in Chicago. Shannon Clark and company did a brilliant job of birthing something very cool. What’s more, I think they did something that is especially challenging in birthing something new and different and diverse without succumbing to the temptation to let it slide into one old category or another, just for the sake of the “numbers.” As a result, it was small and brilliant. I was glad to be there and am glad to be part of the ongoing conversations that will become next year’s conference. A few links for the record…

  • Yellow Arrow – an amazing experiment that is suggesting the world as a global sort of performance art installation via the ‘yellow arrow’ sticker that becomes a digital ‘tag’ for things in the physical world. place the tag in the physical world and record it online via cellphone, find a tag in the world and retrieve via cellphone the stories of others who’ve already been there.
  • WorldChanging – weblog of Jamais Cascio and friends. Jamais told a fascinating story as his presentation at the conference.
  • Chicago Craft Mafia – organized by Mark Smithivas and friends to represent crafts from glasswork to soapmaking, seems to be part of a larger network of local economy, all of which I find very heartening.
  • i.c. stars |* – a learning program that teaches technical skills to young adults and then turns them loose for the benefit of community organizations. this kind of technology, social action and economic activity seems so very right.
  • Also got a much better understanding of what’s happening with Flickr and del.icio.us. Looks like sCNN is going delicious as soon as I can find time to set it up.
  • Need to check out blogdex.com to see what that is all about, moving more and more in the direction of diversifying and diffusing my sources of news about what’s happening in my world. guess that would be diversifying and diffusing my world!

Working in Cafés Invitation

This from Shannon Clark of JigZaw and MeshForum. I’ve added it to the new “Special Invitations” section of the PeaSoup sidebar, too.

Starting next week (May 24th 2005) and continuing at least for the next few months I have decided to work from Café Mud in Evanston on Tuesdays and Thursdays.

I invite each of you, when and as you wish, to join me at Café Mud and work.

Café Mud is at 1936 Maple Ave, just 1/2 block west of the Foster Ave Purple line el stop and in a part of Evanston with fairly easy street parking. They have free wifi, large concrete tables, plenty of electrical outlets, and are relatively quiet during the daytime.

This is an open invitation, please feel free to share with other consultants and entrepreneurs. My plan is to take the purple line express in the morning, get to Café Mud around 9am and leave Evanston around 5pm on the purple line express back into the city.

The goal is to work, but to also have friends and associates present and in the same physical space. I anticipate that some of us will break each day around lunchtime and grab lunch together somewhere in Evanston.

See you at Café Mud, when I’m back on that side of the pond, in August.

Balance and Flow

I’m restructuring again here. Inside and out. And thinking about the mix of what I give attention to now.

I’m just finishing six months of volunteer work in a meditation center, grounding, in cooking, housekeeping, maintenance, and basic reception (space holding) duties. Grounding in community too, as resident volunteer. And still, never giving up on all of the reading, creating, connecting and consulting conversations that happen online and on the phone, usually at great distance.

Restructuring now means teetering on the edge of a very interesting organization that just might want a big chunk of my London time, and on the edge of a number of personal connections, old and new, in Chicago, that could bear business fruit. And then there are the community connections, like smallchange and ubumama, and a couple of listserve communities. Learning anew how to balance all of the information flow and connecting at distance, even local distance, without losing ground right here, in body, in home away from home.

Years ago I remember a Wall Street Journal advertisement saying that the average reader spent 51 minutes with the Journal each day. Add in some other reading, conversations that have moved from phone to email, a bit of blog posting, and it seems fair to devote at least a couple of hours to keeping up with the distant cloud of people, ideas and connections. Seems also fair, to devote a balancing equivalent to body and home space, cooking, cleaning.

Maybe local community connecting comes into this, too? Dinner with friends? Time with a partner? Somewhere this must cross into third and fourth or more balancing spaces. No matter which and how many, for now it seems enough to notice where base is, what base is. Do I rely on all of this wording and information to clear myself or ground myself? Do my blogging and emailing and other scribbling habits and projects make me who I am, or make me more clear and present and available as the local body who I already was?

For now, I just keep an eye on this balance between the daily information cleaning and clearing and the equivalent attention to body, home and spirit. Let the rest fall somewhere in between as the undifferentiated flow of working and living.

UbuMama Progress

The weblog for UbuMama, a worldwide safe motherhood project, is finally taking shape. This is one of several community/technical projects I’m giving time and attention to these days.

[UbuMama is] …a Zulu word for motherhood, and an arts-based project dedicated to bringing mothers’ stories of giving birth in the developing world into public view, to honor the lives of mothers and to increase the commitment to saving the lives of women dying in childbirth.

Each minute, a woman dies from complications experienced during pregnancy and childbirth. More than 500,000 women die each year and 99% of these deaths occur in the developing world.

Almost all of these deaths are preventable.

Some good background on the project and resources links added yesterday. Looking forward to stories and images from around the world, as this movement gets born.

Youth Summit?

Dan Bassill posted yesterday on the need to connect so many different groups and efforts and datasets all focused on youth issues in and beyond Chicago. I offered this…

i hear a lot of networks overlapping in this, dan, but can’t quite hear a statement of a central theme or task or purpose that might serve to link them all. wondering if you might be able to name/shop/test that theme and if we couldn’t organize a day or two in open space this august while i’m back again from london.

the group could be large or small, the venue could be available for free. i’d work at some kind of mutual donation rate, i give my work and participants make small gifts to a facilitation fund. if the few paragraphs of invite went out to the groups you’re talking about here, then the whole invite process could be free. and lunch could be on our own in the neighborhood. recall that three days at depaul’s egan center ran something like $30 per head. any interest? any theme/purpose statement spring to mind?

Hope we get to do something on this. Resources in the pot may be few, but with so many people involved in the same issues, resources in the pockets must be many. Think OpenSpaceTech as Stone Soup or Loaves and Fishes. Let’s Eat!

Accelerating Democracy in South Africa

Originally posted to sCNN – the smallChangeNewsNetwork

This in today from Bliss Browne. Contact her directly for more info.

I am wondering if any of you might be, or know of others who might be, interested in helping support a very exciting democracy accelerator in South Africa. Details are attached. The total budget to underwrite this event is about $5,000.

Our simple thought in hosting this creative learning exchange was that it would be stimulating and potentially important to gather committed community activists (who are also spiritually grounded) and magnify the energy of social transformation so needed at this time in South Africa. So many who work at the intersection of creativity, community and justice do so alone. Having a visible community unleashes even more generativity and brings a reservoir of hope and courage to persevere.The magic alchemy of a room full of transformers is a wondrous prospect. We are getting strong interest from remarkable people.

Andries Botha and I have put this together as a labor of love, without budget or administrative support. We are already hearing from people in informal settlements and black townships (both in Soweto and Cape Town) who would LOVE to come but need financial support for transport and accommodations. Andries and I are not in a position to provide such support, having already contributed our own time and expenses including my airfare from the US and local venue costs. We want commitment rather than money to be the currency and for community activists working on the ground to be able to participate. I’ve written a note to my few corporate contacts in South Africa to see if they might provide modest underwriting but no luck so far. Any thoughts you have about people who would appreciate the opportunity to provide funding support would be most gratefully received. Their support would enable the participation of passionate, committed, spirited people who are transforming their communities into more just and vital places.

Bliss has been working and organizing things in South Africa for more than a year now, building on her successes with ImagineChicago. Andries is a leading South African artist and activist.

technorati: |

© 1998-2020 Michael Herman. All Rights Reserved.