#systemschange Episode 1- Context, leverage & systemic change, big history, and social innovation
#systemschange Episode 2: Alignment Without Agreement- Strategies for Systems Change hosted by CrowdDoing.world.
Participants in #SystemsChange Episode 1 include:
Yangbo Du
Steve Waddell
Saskia Verraes
Jack Park
Grant Holton
Participants in #SystemsChange Episode 2 include:
"Going upstream to prevent harm, a strategy for systemic change", #systemschange Episode 3 by CrowdDoing.world.
Bobby Fishkin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/bobbyfishkin/
Fyodor Ovchinnikov | LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/fovchinnikov/
Juliette Devillard: https://www.linkedin.com/in/juliette-devillard/
Colin Campbell | LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/unlocking-potential/
Grant Holton | LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/grant-holton/ Jaap Verraes | LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jverraes/
Karl Sjogren | LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/karlsjogren/ Michael Critelli | LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mikecritelli/ Nick Gogerty | LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/nickgogerty/ Saskia Verraes | LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/saskiaverraes/ Steve Waddell | LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/steve-waddell-2130081/
Tanuja Prasad | LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tanujaprasad/ Tomas Carruthers | LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tomascarruthers/
"Making the invisible visible to make systemic change feasible": #SystemsChange Episode 4 by CrowdDoing.world
May 22nd 2020, #systemschange
Bobby Fishkin:
Wilfried De Wever, Grant Holton | LinkedIn: , Karl Sjogren: , Michael Critelli, | Saskia Verraes | Steve Waddell | Tomas Carruthers | Yangbo Du, Rajinder Jhol,
Mark Moulton, David Hodgson, #socialinnovation #upstream #prevention #systemicchange #systemsthinking
#systemschange Episode 5: #systemsinnovation
#systemschange Episode 6- The service-learning singularity-- learn anything efficiently
#SystemsChange Episode 9: Systems change conversation with Bobby Fishkin, Jacob Cole, Karl Sjogren, Mark Moulton, Yang Du, Bob Spoer, Rajinder Johl, and Saskia Verraes.
#systemschange Episode 10- Building Communities
Conversation with Bobby Fishkin, Michael Critelli, Jim Rutt, Yangbo Du, Fié Neo, Saskia Verraes, Jacob Cole, Wilfried De Wever, and Karl Sjogren.
#systemschange Episode 11
#systemschange Episode 12
Regenerative Artificial Intelligence to Backcast from a Solar Punk Future via ChatGPT, NovelAI,etc
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https://www.udemy.com/course/backcasting-via-regenerative-ai/?srsltid=AfmBOorjL4Nlwlcn2hLZfFBHjLH-hKBTANJW5H-i1TzVLxkS9O712C-W
Conversation between Bobby Fishkin of CrowdDoing & Open Innovation Brazil
Systemic change through social innovation density. https://www.linkedin.com/in/heliomosquim/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/bobbyfishkin/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/amosquim/ Systemic Change Conversation between Bobby Fishkin, CrowdDoing, and Open Innovation Brazil's Helio and Alexander. http://match4action.org, Reframe It (http://blog.reframeit.com/2017/05/16/under-utilized-collaborative-intelligence/) https://www.volunteermatch.org/search/org1130924.jsp, CrowdDoing (https://www.linkedin.com/groups/13561240/, https://www.facebook.com/groups/219137818932726/) Food as Medicine, Medicinal Foods & foods that function (https://www.linkedin.com/groups/13608509/, https://www.facebook.com/groups/1871207846517979/) Crypto Impact Research (Crypto Sustainable Development Goal Collaborative Research)https://www.linkedin.com/groups/13611567/, Impact Investing & Systemic Change: https://www.linkedin.com/groups/13520549/, AI for Good, https://www.facebook.com/groups/181152952554213/, Project Management & Systemic Change, https://www.facebook.com/groups/287465328687922/
Micro-leadership- CrowdDoing: Leveraging Micro-Leadership to Make Aspirational Goals Achievable
One of the most important issues facing institutions and organizations today is a shortage of people with leadership skills, experience, and capabilities. The problem is two-fold: too many leadership roles are too big for any one person to reasonably take on, leading to excessive levels of burnout among leaders we do have; in addition, there are too few leaders in the talent pipeline. At CrowdDoing we are piloting solutions to both dimensions of this problem.
For a mission-driven organization, concentrating and centralizing responsibility for the entity’s success or failure in one macro leader—be that person a CEO, President, Executive Director, or Founder—is a system that will overwhelm that macro leader by design.
But an organization can also succeed when many individuals in it each adopt a dimension of responsibility for an aspect of the challenges it faces. This kind of micro leadership is fostered by CrowdDoing. It strengthens the talent pipeline by providing a diversity of individuals access to leadership skills and experience. Macro leaders who are supported by organized constellations of micro-leaders share the creative responsibility for the success of their organization in a way that reduces stress and lightens the burden for all involved.
We live in a world in which 193 countries agreed to collaborate with all stakeholders to achieve Sustainable Development Goals: to enhance public health, prevent poverty, increase environmental sustainability etc. by 2030. So far the world is not yet on track for achieving these goals by the deadline. In order for these goals to become feasible, collaboration around social innovation will need to scale markedly. Each individual mission-driven organization almost always has aspirational goals that are far greater in scale than its means. Micro-leadership can make up the difference.
CrowdDoing aspires to achieve systemic change by deploying under-utilized capacities to increase the density of social innovations relevant to solving a particular societal challenge. Leverage for impact requires finding and applying resources that are not currently deployed in a way that addresses societal challenges. CrowdDoing applies micro leadership to disparate collective challenges. These have included, for example, the following: researching biophilia cost-benefits in cities to make it feasible to finance plants; improving collective knowledge of the relative efficacy of combinations of foods that can help alleviate prevent and stress, insomnia, and anxiety; and evaluating blockchain mechanisms for addressing Sustainable Development Goals. One completed case study that CrowdDoing conducted was the first impact assessment of a mini-IPO by a social enterprise on Nasdaq.
Micro leadership has a history which has been confined to a particular field: open source software has historically leveraged micro leadership among computer scientists to build operating systems such as Linux. CrowdDoing learns from what the open source community has long known about the potential efficacy of micro-leadership. But micro leadership has not been extended to multi-disciplinary collaboration.
Although there may be a shortage of macro leaders, there is an abundance of potential micro leaders. CrowdDoing's impact venture lab and CrowdDoing’s portfolio of social innovations and social enterprises offer almost anyone the opportunity to contribute to systemic change as a volunteer micro leader. Micro-leadership does not require that any one person take the weight of the world upon his or her shoulders. While macro leaders take comprehensive responsibility, micro-leaders seek responsibility for only a dimension of a societal challenge in collaboration with others. CrowdDoing creates a diversity of roles that allow individuals to take on flexible part-time levels of responsibility to address a specific dimension of a social challenge. CrowdDoing is premised on the idea that almost everyone has the capacity for leadership. Micro-leadership with regards to almost any social challenge can come from almost any disciplinary background.
Historically, problems that can be addressed within a discipline have required less collaboration than problems that cut across many fields. All wicked problems, such as preventing urban air pollution, are by definition multi-causal rather than mono-causal. This makes the need for micro-leadership all the more important. Achieving United Nations SDGs very often depends upon solving wicked problems because wicked problems represent an increasing proportion of challenges we face collectively. The prevention gaps they embody can only be addressed through developing and applying new forms and methods of multi-disciplinary collaboration. This new scale of collaboration allows any given wicked problem to get addressed through multiple vectors of prevention otherwise known as social innovations.
CrowdDoing operates on the principle of parallel collaboration, parallel cooperation, and parallel streams of effort that come together to make systemic change possible. Social innovations can become engines of inclusive collaboration in proportion to how they diversify and scale the number and depth of volunteer roles they create. CrowdDoing’s pilots in micro-leadership and parallel collaboration can represent an alternative model for how we can grow social innovations to address Sustainable Development Goals.
CrowdDoing.world & Sustainavistas Debt For Nature Systems Change Hackathon. Hackathon Team Sustainavistas : Grant Holton CoFounder linkedin.com/in/grant-holton, CEO Bobby Fishkin crowddoing.world, Systemic Change https://www.linkedin.com/in/bobbyfishkin/ First Presentator : CEO Arcus Foundation Annette Lanjouw https://www.linkedin.com/in/annette-lanjouw-1a959ab/ Second Presenter: Russell A. Mittermeier, Ph.D. Chief Conservation Officer; and Chair, IUCN SSC Primate Specialist Group Global Wildlife Conservation Sections 0:00-0:46- Annette discusses the drivers of threat towards wildlife currently. 0:48-2:43- Annette addresses Tropical Forest Conservation and it's aim. 2:45-4:06- Annette discusses the Debt for Nature initiatives. 4:08-5:40- Annette talks about activities that were funded through Debt For Nature swaps. 5:42-7:33-Annette discusses the impacts of Debt for Nature's swaps and the challenges of the project. 7:35-9:17-Annette discusses the debt and funding to protect national forests. 9:19-12:22-Annette brings up the impacts of Debt For Nature swaps and how it can be implemented successfully. 12:24-15:26- Annette discusses Orangutan conservation and the funding goals for conservation. 15:34-18:41- Russell discusses the concept of Debt For Nature's swaps and the vulnerability of Lemurs. 18:45-21:30- Russell discusses problems of funds created to support Madagascar's wildlife and Dirck discusses the challenges of finding long term funding solution for ape populations. 22:40-23:10- Russell discusses trust funds created from Debt For Nature funds. 23:40-27:52- Russell and Annette discusses the distribution and development of Debt For Nature swaps, transfer of funds, and action plans. 29:02- 32:43- Russell and Annette discuss funding for indigenous communities to protect their land and the problems that consists of accessing the Debt For Nature funds. 33:55-34:55- Russell discusses the problems and the needs to get the Debt For Nature funds out as soon as possible. 35:39-40:56- Russell, Annette, and Dirck discuss guidelines to put action plans, motivating creditors, members of US congress's trip to Africa, and funding to lands like Madagascar. 42:23-43:56- Russell discusses working with Suriname's indigenous people and environmental legislation they developed to help Debt For Nature's works. 44:16-45:24- Annette talks about getting indigenous people to make decisions about using the funds for their land. Check us out on Social Media! Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/crowddoing.world/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CrowdDoing-515295062320613/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/crowddoing/ Interested in volunteering opportunities? Sign up at: https://www.crowddoing.world/volunteer/ Check out our website at https://www.crowddoing.world/