Climate Change

Welcome to this December 2015 issue of Winds & Waves, the online magazine of ICA International, entitled “Climate Change”.

W&W 1215-coverThe Institute of Cultural Affairs (ICA) was so named, when first separately incorporated in 1973, to reflect its social mission of ‘human development’. This was to restore balance to the social process by strengthening the weak cultural (meaning-giving) dynamic in society, relative to the dominant economic and allied political dynamics that provide sustenance and order.

The wider context for the social process, now as then, is the natural environment of our planet. As the environmental impacts of our still-unbalanced social process have escalated, and become more clearly understood, so ICAs have increasingly sought to broaden their global perspective to include the environmental as well as the social and the spirit dimensions of human development.  Reflecting this trend, former CEO of ICA USA Terry Bergdall describes ICA’s mission in his 2015 ICA Handbook as ‘to build a just and equitable society in harmony with Planet Earth’.

London Climate March 2015
COP21: Thousands join London climate change march, November 29

This issue is published in the month that 196 parties to the 2015 United Nations Climate Change Conference have negotiated a global agreement on the reduction of climate change at ‘COP21’ in Paris – an extraordinary achievement, and the result of an extra-ordinary process. The conference was preceded on 28-29 November by worldwide civil society actions, intended to ‘send a message to world leaders in Paris’, involving over 785,000 people and 2,300 events in over 175 countries according to 350.org.

Many have remarked on the radical transformation of our global economy, and therefore also of our politics and culture, that will be required for us to achieve even the goal of limiting global warming to less than 2 degrees Celsius (°C) compared to pre-industrial levels, let alone the more ambitious target of 1.5 degrees that was also agreed in Paris. This certainly represents a daunting challenge. Like every crisis, however, climate change represents an opportunity as well. To paraphrase Naomi Klein in ‘This Changes Everything’, referenced here by Richard & Maria Maguire in Australia, climate change presents the clearest and most compelling case we could wish for that such a transformation of the social process is indeed required, and in the interests of all of us, urgently. With the Paris agreement of the world’s governments now in place, both the challenge and the opportunity for civil society is clear. As our own ICA mantra has it, “These are the times” and “We are the people”.

In this issue you will find stories of how ICAs and ICA colleagues participated in those climate actions in November, and how they are responding to climate change in their work more broadly, in Australia and the USA, and in Canada, DRC & Peru. You will also find stories of how the social process has unfolded over 40 years in communities that hosted some of ICA’s original Human Development Projects of the 1970s in Chile, Guatemala, and Indonesia & Malaysia.

As usual, this issue includes stories of a variety of methods and approaches to human development around the world.  These include facilitating conciliation in Ukraine, transformational action planning in Taiwan and facilitation learning labs in Hong Kong; story telling and oral history in the USA and the Torres Strait Islands of Australia; philanthropy in India and micro-enterprise in Chile; medical support in DRC and impact assessment in Kenya; Montessori pre-school education in Sri Lanka and youth volunteering in Tajikistan; and dialogues, book studies and reflective blogging online.

You will also find book reviews on personal transformation and sexuality in India, on social transformation and gender in Nepal and on dynamic ageing in the USA; plus reflections from Venezuela on ‘swimming with the current’ and social chaos, from Japan on the evolution of leadership styles and from Ukraine on culture and organisation development.

ICA International has been delighted to be able to support a upsurge of face-to-face regional gatherings of ICAs this year, first of East & Southern Africa in Tanzania May and then (reported in this issue) of West Africa in Cote D’Ivoire in September, Europe MENA  in the Netherlands in November and Asia Pacific in India in December. We are looking forward to a regional gathering of the Americas in Peru in April, and keen to support all the regions to expand and deepen their regional and inter-regional interchange next year.

We are delighted to welcome two new Associate members to ICA International, both approved unanimously by our online General Assembly this month.  SCR Kenya and NCOC Kenya were both nominated by ICA Kenya with the support of ICA Uganda and ICA Tanzania, and both are led by long-time colleagues of ICA in Kenya.

We are grateful to the 28 ICAs who have responded recently to our global survey on members’ usage of, capacity for and aspirations for ToP (Technology of Participation) facilitation methods, and to the ICAI Global ToP working group that is analysing the responses in order to make recommendations for peer-to-peer support and collaboration among ICAs in implementing our new global ToP policy.  We urge members that have not yet responded to continue to do so – please contact us to ask for a link to the online survey form.

We are also grateful to the ICAI Global Conference working group for its work with Initiatives of Change (IofC) exploring possibilities for a joint conference in Human Development at IofC Caux in Switzerland or elsewhere, now perhaps in 2017 or 2018.

We are grateful as ever to the tireless editorial team of Winds & Waves itself, who work so hard to enable us to share these stories and insights on human development  in this magazine three times each year.  I echo the appeal of Peter Ellins in this issue – please do contribute to the magazine next year, and please contact us if you may be interested in joining the team to support with commissioning, reporting, editing, layout and design, social media, or in any other way.

Thank you finally to our contributors and our readers, and to all our members, partners and colleagues ‘advancing human development worldwide’.  I wish a very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year to all who are celebrating them.

Enjoy this issue, and please share it and encourage others to do so.


TABLE OF CONTENTS
hyperlinks are to the regular online version

President’s message

Masthead

Behind the scenes

Letters to the editor

Climate Change

March raises hope in Sydney by Richard and Maria Maguire

A New Story for New Times by Nelson Stover

People power for Paris climate deal by various contributors

Facilitation

Resolving conflict in a war zone by Bill Staples

Giving Action Planning a new edge by Lawrence Philbrook

Learning Lab for Hong Kong by Florence Lau

Missions

Small town’s story-telling tradition by Janet Sanders

Kick starting the Joy of Giving by Sara Adhikari

The Congo Canoe Challenge by Kiran Hutchinson

Yarning in the Torres Strait by Robyn Hutchinson and Deborah Ruiz Wall

A People’s Journey by Deborah Ruiz Wall

Books

Getting to grips with social transformation by Dr Punam Yadav

Re-firing your life after 60 by Audri Scott Williams

Learning goes online by Steve Harrington

How India changed my life by John Burbidge

 

ICA International

ICA Asia Pacific Regional Meeting by Mark Pixley

Africa and Europe regional meetings  photos

ICA Reports

ICA CHILE

La panadería que cambio el poblado by Isabel Rodriguez Ruz

Bakery that changed a village (English translation)

ICA GUATEMALA

Conacaste dream comes true by Joaquina Rodriguez

ICA SRI LANKA

Running a Montessori school in a village by Puthrika Moonesinghe

ICA TAJIKISTAN

Volunteer project inspires youth  by Marina Safarova 

ICA:UK

Measuring the impact on Africa by Jonathan Dudding

Perspectives

A tale of two villages by Rob and Dixie Jennings Teats

Blogging for the weary traveller by John & Lynda Cock

Navegar las fuerzas y el equilibrio de las fuerzas by Teresa Sosa

Swimming with the current amid social chaos (English translation)

Getting the culture right by Svetlana Salamatova

Changing styles of leadership by Shizuyo Sato and Wayne Ellsworth

What’s On 

International Dialogues on Discrimination by Svetlana Salamatova

 


This post was first published in Winds and Waves, December 2015.

2 thoughts on “Climate Change

  1. Ted Wysocki says:

    ICA-USA is exploring how to best change the conversation about climate change including a session at the Technology of Participation (ToP) 25th anniversary gathering in early January and outreach to faith communities here in Chicago. Globally and locally, we all should act per Pope Francis’ Encyclical Letter LAUDATO SI: “I urgently appeal, then, for a new dialogue about how we are shaping the future of our planet. We need a conversation which includes everyone, since the environmental challenge we are undergoing, and its human roots, concern and affect us all.”

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