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Building Coalitions PART TWO

This workshop series focuses on the process of working with diverse stakeholders to create environmental change that reduces AODV problems. Part 1 covers basic theories and tools for community organizing and stakeholder relationship development, while Part 2 focuses on organizing opportunities for stakeholder/community deliberation and decision-making.

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Building Coalitions PART TWO

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  1. Building CoalitionsPART TWO Linda Major Ian Newman University of Nebraska-Lincoln Tom Workman University of Houston-Downtown

  2. Overview of Workshops • Focus is on the PROCESS of working with diverse stakeholders across the community in order to create environmental change that reduces AODV problems. • PART 1 will focus on the basic theories and tools to community organizing and stakeholder relationship development • PART 2 will focus on organizing opportunities for stakeholder/community deliberation and decision-making

  3. Resources • Deep Change: Discovering the Leader Within, Robert E Quinn (1996) • Building the Bridge As You Walk On It: A Guide for Leading Change, Quinn (2004) • Change the World: How Ordinary People Can Achieve Extraordinary Results, Quinn (2000) • The Speed of Trust, Stephen Covey (2007) • The Art of Engagement: Bridging the Gap Between People and Possibilities, Jim Haudan (2008)

  4. Robert Quinn’s Model of Four Change Strategies (2000) Level 4: The Transforming Strategy Transcend self; emphasis on emergent reality Level 3: The Participating Strategy Open dialogue; emphasis on relationship Level 2: The Forcing Strategy Leveraging behavior; emphasis on authority Level 1: The Telling Strategy Rational persuasion; emphasis on facts

  5. Employing Quinn’s Perspectives to Create A Model of Community Organizing for AODV Environmental Change The transcending frame enables coalition leaders and members to think broadly about collaborating between interests, recognizing the needs and concerns of others, and operating from a vision of abundant opportunity The Participating Strategy All three Strategy choices are viable when appropriate to the situation and objective The Forcing Strategy The Telling Strategy TRANSCENDING FRAME

  6. “Informed Deliberation” • A process where stakeholders are educated around a set of data and perspectives about a problem • Perspective sharing broadens understanding for all stakeholders • All stakeholders participate in collaborative problem-solving with new understanding of the issues

  7. What’s A Community Forum? • Involves an open group of stakeholders from specific arena or a smaller group of stakeholders coming together around a specific issue • Creates an informed discussion around specific set of issues or needs • Enables multiple perspectives to be shared in a single setting • Provides community-wide knowledge of issues, tensions, trade-offs, and next steps.

  8. Common Elements • Presentation of Relevant Data • Presentation of Perspectives or Experiences • Opportunity to Experience Issue Directly • Open, Recorded Discussion • Formal Reporting and Next Steps

  9. Examples from the Field • The Resident Roundtable Project • The “Bar Walk” • Neighborhoods • Tailgates • Hospitality Community Forums • False Identification • Birthday Bar Crawls • Over-Service

  10. Preparing Forums: Lessons Learned • Establish a core planning team • Individuals representing key stakeholders • Team establishes goals for the forum and the process that supports these goals • Team helps frame the discussion so that it is broad and inclusive of all aspects of the issue • Team members solicit stakeholders from multiple perspectives to participate • Team processes the forum, communicates the outcomes, and helps enact next steps for progress

  11. Preparing Forums: Lessons Learned • Outcomes can’t be dictated by an agenda; the goal is NOT convincing the community to go along with your plan • Effective outcomes of a community forum are expanded awareness of the tensions, trade-offs, and perspectives that must be considered in order to find a lasting solution to the problem. The outcome is “collective insight.”

  12. Preparing Forums: Lessons Learned • Framing is critical • Issues, experiences and deliberations need careful and thoughtful framing • Frame needs to be communicated from invitation through introductions and discussion • DATA: What do we KNOW • Perspectives: What does it FEEL like living in this reality? • Purpose: Why are we here and what can we gain from this experience?

  13. Preparing Forums: Lessons Learned • Post-forum follow-up should build a public record of progress • Report back the discussion and the input to those present and those they represent • Careful editing: Let people hear their voice in reports • Identify tensions and trade offs for various stakeholders • Identify established common ground • Capture the energy toward creating viable solutions • Articulate next steps as public record

  14. Preparing Forums: Lessons Learned • Most forums may NOT be the best choice for media inclusion • People need safe place to voice dissent and tensions without dissent becoming the headline • Forums are exploration opportunities and not places where clear community statements can be made. • Post-forum reports or implementation activities are better for media,

  15. Small Group Exercise Let’s Create a Forum: • Choose the issue to serve as forum topic • Determine key stakeholders who have a vested interest in the issue • Core Team? • Voices at the forum? • Identify data that might help inform the discussion • Determine the frame for the discussion • Determine potential forum outcomes • Create an agenda supporting the intended outcomes

  16. Results • Enactment of new policies • Digital Drivers License • Increased penalties for disorderly house citations • Increase in support across community • Birthday Bar Crawl – Voluntary Agreement • Reduction in binge drinking rates and related problems • Clarity in media coverage and public discussion

  17. For more information • Tom WorkmanUniversity of Houston-DowntownWorkmanT@uhd.edu713/221-8952 • Linda MajorUniversity of Nebraskalmajor1@unl.edu402/472-2454www.nudirections.org • Ian NewmanUniversity of Nebraskainewman1@unl.edu402/472-3844

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