[ap_spacing spacing_height=”15px”]About six months ago I was introduced to a deeply remarkable development – and its even more profound implications – by two people who didn’t know each other and with whom I’ve talked in depth almost every week since then.

[ap_spacing spacing_height=”15px”]This development electrifies me. I have long felt that achieving effective, inclusive, decentralized governance would require a major, perhaps insurmountable effort. But these two folks have opened my eyes to an unexpected form of such governance manifesting right now all around the world.

[ap_spacing spacing_height=”15px”]What is that emerging inclusive, decentralized form of governance?

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COMPLEX INCLUSIVE NETWORKS AS GOVERNANCE

[ap_spacing spacing_height=”15px”]These new friends pointed out rapidly increasing activity of networks that embrace

  • multiple sectors (public sector, private sector, and civil society)…
  • multiple stakeholders (diverse parties involved in various issues and systems)… and
  • multiple scales (ranging from local to global).

[ap_spacing spacing_height=”15px”]They shared their thrill at seeing this complex activity emerging as a new form of whole-system engagement and governance that could transcend governMENT as we’ve come to know it. (See the examples and analyses referenced at the end of this email.)

[ap_spacing spacing_height=”15px”]My companions in this new inquiry and sense of possibility are Tracy Kunkler and Steve Waddell. Both work with transformationally oriented stakeholder networks, Tracy mostly with local and regional systems, Steve at all levels including global networks self-organizing around the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals.

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SOME BIG QUESTIONS FOR THE BIG PICTURE

[ap_spacing spacing_height=”15px”]Last month, at the Frontiers of Democracy conference in Boston, Steve, Tracy and I presented a session entitled “How Do We Midwife the Emergence of Wise Governance Networks?”

[ap_spacing spacing_height=”15px”]Our session description asked a few additional questions:

  • Are you sensing new patterns of societal governance in multi-sector networks?
  • Are they more diverse and adaptive to the scale and pace of change than governments?
  • Might they become powerful governance structures, growing to include government, but also transcending it?
  • How can we influence the emergence of these to be democratic, powerful, and wise?

[ap_spacing spacing_height=”15px”]Note that by “governance” we don’t mean governMENT (although that’s part of it), but ALL the things groups, organizations and institutions do to shape what happens on the ground to deal with societal issues and goals and how our collective lives unfold.

[ap_spacing spacing_height=”15px”]Of course when we look at what governMENTs do, they definitely impact that. But so do businesses and civil society groups. So when a network involves players from the public sector, the private sector, AND civil society, we are talking about a multi-SECTOR network.

[ap_spacing spacing_height=”15px”]And if we look at issues (like poverty, human rights, or climate change) or at social systems (like food systems, health care systems, or educational systems), and we find that groups across the spectrum of roles and perspectives are trying to work together to have some kind of shared impact on the issue or system they’re all part of, we are talking about multi-STAKEHOLDER networks.

[ap_spacing spacing_height=”15px”]And if any of these include players at various different levels of functioning – local, state, regional, national, international, global, etc. – we are talking about multi-SCALE networks.

[ap_spacing spacing_height=”15px”]These are not so much networks of individuals as networks of groups, organizations, and institutions. When they begin to weave together into multi-sector, multi-stakeholder, multi-scale (MS3) networks, they become increasingly inclusive, often by asking “Who else should be part of this work, this conversation?” With true inclusiveness, the level and texture of impact they have – and could have – begins to boggle my mind. They present the possibility of millions of committed eyes, ears, heads, hands, and hearts working together on the ground in every aspect of any given issue or system. (If you are concerned about the possible totalitarian implications of this, please see my asterisked* note below.)

[ap_spacing spacing_height=”15px”]And IF they are actually working together effectively – addressing concerns, developing shared goals and standards, seeing beyond narrowly framed interests – what we have is a whole new level of whole-system governance of, by, and for whole systems. By being part of groups who are part of these networks, whoever is involved in a collective challenge or vision can be engaged in addressing it. A tremendous amount of competence, passion, and knowledge can be tapped for positive evolution in that realm – indeed, in all realms.

[ap_spacing spacing_height=”15px”]At least that’s the vision I glimpsed, and it hooked me.

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PROVIDING A KEY MISSING INGREDIENT

[ap_spacing spacing_height=”15px”]When we asked the attendees in our workshop what they were experiencing in their networks, they told us that the unprecedented diversity of the participants was showing up as a real problem. These networks include people from different cultures and worldviews (think governments, businesses, and nonprofits), different sides of various issues, different constituencies, and so on, quite in addition to different demographics, experiences, organizational styles, and more….

[ap_spacing spacing_height=”15px”]I realized that many people in the networks I’M connected to – facilitators, mediators, organizational consultants, process designers, conveners, community organizers, and so on – have tremendous know-how that can help people work creatively across differences. (Much of this expertise is reflected in the wise democracy pattern language, most notably in the pattern “Using Diversity and Disturbance Creatively” but actually throughout the pattern language.) Since these roles form a professional category that specializes in helping different people work together effectively, I realized that those professions are a vital ingredient for the successful emergence of this new whole-system form of governance. That role urgently needs to be acknowledged and strengthened as a factor in how all this unfolds.

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WHAT ABOUT WISE DEMOCRACY?

[ap_spacing spacing_height=”15px”]Talking about all this as a new form of governance immediately raises the question of where We the People are in all this – where are we, the citizens … we, the communities? What is our role and our power? Where exactly do we – or should we – fit in this new governance picture?  What public answerability should stakeholder networks have – and vice versa?  Should citizen deliberative councils play a major role in focusing the goals of stakeholder networks or reviewing their activities? Might crowdsourcing solutions or priorities engage the public in issues being addressed by stakeholder networks that require whole-community involvement? (Note that Citizen/Stakeholder Balance was part of the wise democracy pattern language long before I met Tracy and Steve.)

[ap_spacing spacing_height=”15px”]This focus on stakeholder networks also raises – for me – the question of how we can increase the likelihood that the results of such coordinated whole-system activities are wise. To what extent will these networks take into account what needs to be taken into account for long-term broad benefit? How can we ensure that oft-overlooked sources of wisdom get included in stakeholder network deliberations?

[ap_spacing spacing_height=”15px”]I’ve been asking such questions for years as my “wise democracy” vision has developed. I have some thoughts about possible answers, but those thoughts are barely a beginning. Fortunately, people like Tracy and Steve also find these questions compelling, realizing their importance if this emerging governance-through-inclusive-networks phenomenon is going to end up being an actual long-term blessing.

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TWO IMPORTANT PIECES OF WISDOM

[ap_spacing spacing_height=”15px”]Two big-picture insights about these questions can help guide our thinking.

[ap_spacing spacing_height=”15px”]1. First of all, the diversity and scope of the people and groups involved – IF they are truly inclusive and successfully working together – automatically means that a wide range of perspectives, experiences, interests, needs, and information will be taken into account. It is only by including these and taking them seriously that the people in these diverse networks will be able to function well together. And, in doing so, they will inherently be taking into account much of what needs to be taken into account. Because of the diversity of concerns and needs considered, these networks will realize “what’s needed for long-term broad benefit”, thereby moving us a long way towards collective wisdom.

[ap_spacing spacing_height=”15px”]2. Secondly, advocates of deliberative democracy have pointed out complementary roles for citizens and stakeholders who function as experts, as embodied in the formula Experts should be on tap, not on top. This formulation is supported by cognitive science that recognizes that facts and reason cannot themselves lead to a decision. They can provide us with much understanding of what is going on in a situation, but in order to make a decision we have to WANT something – which necessarily involves our desires, feelings, values, and needs. Although these can be defended by reason, they can’t be derived solely through reason; they are fundamental. So in a democracy it is the people’s needs and dreams, the community’s values, the common interest that should properly guide decision-making, not experts.

Yes,we the people need the advice of experts like stakeholders and researchers to help us understand the actual conditions and dynamics of life well enough to satisfy our needs and manifest our values in the complexity of the real world. But WE ARE the ultimate experts regarding our needs, our values, our longings, and our everyday experience.

[ap_spacing spacing_height=”15px”]So there is potential for tremendously effective wisdom to emerge from the dense diversity and broad reach of inclusive stakeholder networks and the kind collective wisdom about which the wise democracy pattern language offers so much guidance.

[ap_spacing spacing_height=”15px”]The inquiry into this prospect, and the work to raise our awareness of it, have just begun. I’d like invite you into both of these. What are your thoughts? What do you think should be attended to and done? What role(s) might you play? Let me know.

[ap_spacing spacing_height=”25px”]Coheartedly,
Tom

[ap_spacing spacing_height=”25px”]* Networks for surveillance and control are necessarily top-down. What I am talking about here are self-organizing networks of diverse groups and organizations trying to work together. They are not networks of individual agents working at the street level for centralized power. Multi-sector, multi-stakeholder, multi-scale networks are complex, multi-faceted systems that do not lend themselves to oppressive control or co-optation by central authorities, although attention is warranted to ensure that remains true as network governance evolves.

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REFERENCES FOR EXPLORING EMERGING INCLUSIVE NETWORKS AS GOVERNANCE

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Global Action Networks

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Forest Stewardship Council

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Large Landscape Conservation

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Collective Impact Forum

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Metagovernance of Governance Networks

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Multi-Stakeholder Initiative Database

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New York’s Juvenile Justice System

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The World Commission on Dams

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Transparency International

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“Global Governance Enterprises: Creating Multisector Collaborations” (2016)

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“Multi-stakeholder Processes for Governance and Sustainability: Beyond Deadlock and Conflict” (2002)

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We encourage you to comment on this post so we can hear about your thoughts and experience.

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