Training for Change. George Lakey, director; Daniel Hunter, program director.  Helping groups stand up for justice, peace, and the environment through strategic non-violence.

border border border border
border border
 Home
 About Us
 Workshops
 Publications
 Articles
 Field Reports
 Books & Manuals
 TFC News Archive
 Tools
 People
 Links
 Site Map
 - - - - - - -

Login Form
Username
Password
Remember me    
Forgotten your password?
Want more tools and handouts? If you are a graduate of a TFC workshop: Create an account

Related Items

Tools

Workshops

Articles & Reports

Books & Manuals

border
border border border border
border border

Glossary of
direct education
terminology
sociogram: an exercise in which participants arrange their bodies to show something about themselves or to stimulate a new awareness. For example, participants are asked to range themselves along a line that shows how long they've been active with a particular cause. See also "spectrum."
Read more...

1744198 Visitors

border
border
Home arrow Publications arrow Books & Manuals arrow Tricks and Treats: Facilitating Dialogue for Social Change


Tricks and Treats: Facilitating Dialogue for Social Change   PDF  Print  E-mail 
JUMP TO:
Tricks and Treats: Facilitating Dialogue for Social Change
1. Why Dialogue? Genesis of the Activist Dialogue Project
  • Vision for Activist Dialogue Project
  • Choosing dialogue, defining communities to work with
  • Getting started: fundraising, hiring, start-up communications
  • Necessary skills: training for facilitators
  • 2. What Happens in Dialogue? What\'s Facilitation Got to Do With It?
  • Atmosphere: timing, venue, food
  • Structure, Themes and Flow in One-on-One Dialogues
  • Structure, Themes, and Flow in Group Dialogues
  • Mistakes: how we made them and how you can avoid them
  • 3. Tricks: Stuff We Did Right and How You Can Duplicate It
    Treats... Results, Verified and Unverified
    Summary: How to Do What We Did, Even Better
    Page 2 of 14

    I. Why Dialogue?
    Genesis of the Activist Dialogue Project

    A. Diagnosis: identifying and focusing on intergenerational tensions

    "Maybe there's something human about curiosity, human enough that it can overcome the comfort of being "right," and support the adventure of a teachable moment." --George Lakey

    "Middle class liberals drive me crazy-- they pretend they're more liberal than they are, then treat me with disrespect at the shop where I work" -- community-based youth activist

    "I have a strong personality, I'm 44, I'm a white heterosexual male, I'm too visually like the oppressor" --older, "seasoned" activist

    To start with the beginning, during the Republican National Convention in the summer of 2000 (R2K), Philadelphia's activist scene was rife with internal conflict and misery (as well as creativity and wonderfully productive energy which gave rise to such projects as Philly's first Independent Media Center giving round the clock coverage to the issues and the action).

    Of the many "divides," one dividing line that gave particular trouble was the generational divide. Clearly class, race, culture, gender, sexual preference, nationality, ability/availability, and political philosophy are huge and chronic divides, all of which emerged along the way as the Dialogue Project explored the inter-generational conflict.

    All year long, in fact, some of the facilitators and participants in the Dialogue Project questioned whether it was appropriate to channel resources into creating an "inter-generational" dialogue when the issues of racism and classism in the movement seemed to us to be even more urgent. Nonetheless, the project as conceived by Training for Change director George Lakey was tightly focused on inter-generational dialogue, addressing a very real and multi-faceted problem which is rarely acknowledged explicitly, let alone addressed consciously, intentionally and creatively, within social change movements.

    Next is George Lakey's essay describing the underpinnings and assumptions behind the original concept of the Dialogue Project.





    go to top Go to Top go to top
    powered by mambo open source
    border
    border
      
    [Globalize Liberation]
    GLOBALIZE LIBERATION
    edited by David Solnit

    Globalize Liberation weaves together the experiences and insights of community organizers, direct action movements, and global justice struggles from North America, Europe, and Latin America. Thirty-three essays provide food for thought, examples of effective action, and practical tools for everyone to use.

    Order On-Line

     
    MAKE A DONATION

    Join us for the long-term success of social movements!

    Donate On-Line

    You can also send a check to: Training for Change
    3241 Columbus Avenue
    Minneapolis, MN 55407

     


     
    Training for Change     3241 Columbus Avenue, South Minneapolis, MN 55407 USA     peacelearn@igc.org     ph:612-827-7323