html5-img
1 / 25

Who Owns Community?

Who Owns Community?. Larry D. Roper Oregon State University. Community…. Context in which we feel nurtured, sustained and stimulated; Where we take ownership and responsibility for the condition of our shared space;

jerome
Download Presentation

Who Owns Community?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Who Owns Community? Larry D. Roper Oregon State University

  2. Community… • Context in which we feel nurtured, sustained and stimulated; • Where we take ownership and responsibility for the condition of our shared space; • An interdependent human system given form by the conversations we hold with ourselves • A paradoxical dance where personal aspiration and personal sacrifice embrace • Where love and forgiveness are central themes

  3. Community is always an urgent and compelling need - more so for some than others

  4. People are seeking connection, engagement, and nourishment – there is a human yearning

  5. Community is fluid, multidimensional and manifested in all interactions and behaviors

  6. Feelings of community are demonstrated in how groups perform, how individuals act towards each other, policies and the physical environment

  7. The desire for community is a university-wide need that requires leadership

  8. The current condition of our society offers clear evidence of the need for community

  9. The Need for Community • Our social institutions are ailing • Lives of members are disconnected • Many people in our organizations feel vulnerable and “at-risk” • Personal value is questioned • Hope is shaken • Everybody is significant and this point must be reinforced by our leadership and relationships

  10. What community can do for us? • Heal and restore • Create a sense of belonging • Acknowledge our interdependence • Elevate our accountability • Demonstrates our value for each person • Offer guidance for our relationship development • Reinforce our commitment to be the type of institution we profess to be • Deepen our love of place and each other

  11. Who should or will step forward and claim ownership for the condition of the space we share?

  12. Roles of Community Builders • Create an agenda for common caring and grace • Make meaning of relationships • Foster connections • Support voice, visibility, and sense of mattering • Help community members discover individual and shared possibilities

  13. As we move though these unprecedented times it is vital that we connect with the people, conversations and events that align with our values, promote healing and growth, optimize the potential of our interconnectivity and support us to be generative in the face of whatever comes. Carolyn Myss, author of Anatomy of the Spirit

  14. Determining Who Owns Community

  15. What possibilities do you hold? Is there a positive future associated with those possibilities?

  16. Demonstrate Generosity

  17. Be Accessible – sit in the middle

  18. Lead people, manage things

  19. Be creative, not eliminative - transform eliminative conversations into conversations of possibilities

  20. Manage other’s reputation as you would manage your own

  21. Reside in hope and communicate a hopeful image of the future

  22. Embody grace - be graceful, gracious and grateful

  23. Elevate the sacred in your work

  24. Connect your head, heart and spirit in your work as a community builder

  25. Whoever names it, owns it

More Related