by Peter Block
COMMUNITY
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COMMUNITY
The Structure of Belonging
PETER BLOCK
Second Edition
Revised and Updated
Community
Copyright © 2018 by Peter Block
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Second Edition
Paperback print edition ISBN 978-1-5230-9556-8
PDF e-book ISBN 978-1-5230-9557-5
IDPF e-book ISBN 978-1-5230-9558-2
2018-1
Developmental editor: Leslie Stephen
Copyeditor: Michele Jones
Book producer and text designer: Leigh McLellan Design
Cover designer: Bookwrights/Mayapriya Long
Indexer: Rachel Rice
To Maggie
In appreciation for your commitment, intelligence, love, and integrity that make what I do possible. You are a placeholder for all who give their talents and love in support of others. Your question “Who will do what by when?” changes the world.
Contents
Welcome
INTRODUCTION The Fragmented Community and Its Transformation
Part One: The Fabric of Community
CHAPTER 1 Insights into Transformation
CHAPTER 2 Shifting the Context for Community
CHAPTER 3 The Stuck Community
CHAPTER 4 The Restorative Community
CHAPTER 5 Taking Back Our Projections
CHAPTER 6 The Inversion into Citizen
CHAPTER 7 The Transforming Community
Part Two: The Alchemy of Belonging
CHAPTER 8 Leadership Is Convening
CHAPTER 9 The Small Group Is the Unit of Transformation
CHAPTER 10 Questions Are More Transforming Than Answers
SUMMING UP Six Conversations
CHAPTER 11 Invitation
CHAPTER 12 The Possibility, Ownership, Dissent, Commitment, and Gifts Conversations
CHAPTER 13 Bringing Hospitality into the World
CHAPTER 14 Designing Physical Space That Supports Community
CHAPTER 15 The End of Unnecessary Suffering
IN SUMMARY The Social Architecture of Building Community
Role Models and Resources
Background Reading and References
Acknowledgments
Index
About the Author
About the Design
The first human who hurled an insult instead of a stone was the founder of civilization.
Sigmund Freud
Welcome
This book is written to support those who care for the well-being of their community. It is for anyone who wants to be part of creating an organization, neighborhood, city, or country that works for all, and who has the faith and the energy to create such a place.
I am one of those people. Whenever I am in a neighborhood or small town and see empty storefronts, watch people floating aimlessly on the sidewalks during school or working hours, visit somewhere that seems like a hard place to raise a child or grow old, I am distressed and anguished. It has become impossible for me to ignore the fact that the world we are creating does not work well for all and increasingly does not work for most.
Along with this distress comes the knowledge that each of us, myself included, is participating in creating this world. If it is true that we are creating this world, then each of us has the power to heal its woundedness. This is not about guilt; it is about accountability. Citizens, in our capacity to come together and choose to be accountable, are our best shot at making a difference. This is true whether you want to improve conditions inside an organization or advance a cause or profession that you believe in, or are engaged in making your neighborhood or city a better place for all who live there.
To act on whatever our intentions might be to make the world better requires something more than individual action. It requires, in almost every case, people who may have little connection with each other, or who may even be on opposite sides of a question, to decide to come together for some common good. The need and the methodology to make this happen simply and quickly are what this book is about.
This truth has become clear in the wide range of unexpected invitations I have received since the book was originally published in 2006. I have been invited to a water scarcity conference in Calgary, Canada. I know nothing about water conservation; in fact, I am one of those people who leaves the water running while brushing my teeth. Companies have asked for help in building a community of mothers who purchase a certain diaper for their children. Ken Jaray was running for mayor of Manitou Springs and wanted to talk about using the community ideas both to run a campaign and to govern when elected. The faith community has repeatedly invited me into a discussion of ways to bring people together to begin a church where none exists and to explore ways to help existing churches more fully engage in the community and not rely on people finding meaning inside the church building. A university concerned about the safety of its students used the community-building ideas to engage its neighbors in taking collective action to make the neighborhood safer. Some cities, such as Colorado Springs, Colorado, even had several hundred groups use this book for their citywide book club with the intent of building a more connected community.
This tells me that the need for the experience of community, which is the collective capacity of citizens to make a difference, has only intensified. Even with all the means available to connect with each other, we live and function in ways that keep us isola
ted. Without new ways to come together, this isolation will persist.
Whatever it is you care about, to make the difference that you seek requires a group of people to learn to trust each other and choose to cooperate for a larger purpose.
The Second Edition
Steve Piersanti, my friend and publisher, called to suggest we put out another edition of this book. These invitations always make me nervous. I get nervous because I wonder if I have anything significant to add. After going through the book again, I chose to create another edition for three reasons. First, with nine years’ experience putting its ideas into practice in my home city of Cincinnati, I can be clearer in expressing them. I have put more emphasis on what works, and extracted those thoughts that were nice, but had no durability. The fresh focus in this edition includes updating prior examples and adding a few new ones.
Second, there is growing interest in building community. Call it culture change in organizations, civic engagement in government, neighborhood building in the social sector, outreach in religion, or democracy in the larger society, there seems to be more and more awareness of the need to create places of belonging.
The third reason for developing a new edition is just my frustration and pain in seeing what is occurring in the world. Community building now seems to be an idea whose time has come. Its promise, though, is not well implemented. We still do a poor job of bringing people together. At best we convene a social event, a block party, or a reception, with food and music. All good things to do, but people most often huddle with like-minded people, and strangers remain strangers.
In the midst of the growing awareness of and innovation in thinking about the need to build community, the dominant practices for how to engage people, civically and organizationally, remain essentially unchanged. We still hold town meetings where one person talks and the rest ask vetted questions. City councils still sit on a platform with microphones and give citizens two minutes each to make their point. Too many gatherings still use PowerPoints for clarity and efficiency. Professional conferences continue to be designed around inspiring keynote speeches and content-filled workshops to attract attendees. Presenting data in this way becomes a weak substitute for learning and education.
Here is one example where the intention was mismatched with the design of the engagement process: In the face of growing poverty, a major city brought together the leaders from business, city government, social service institutions, and neighborhoods to form a task force to reduce poverty. The issue could have been any concern anywhere: education, health, safety, economic growth. In this case it was poverty. Great intention.
The strategy, however, was to follow the same predictable process that has not worked time and time again: First, a high-level steering committee was formed. Next, a sizeable amount of money was committed. Third, an expert outside research group was paid to analyze the problem. The group’s findings were predictable: poverty is indeed a problem. This then led to setting bold goals and creating blueprints for actions, with timetables, milestones, and measures. This classic problem-solving approach basically called for trying harder at all the things that had been done for years. More mentoring of youth, better school achievement, more job training, greater commitment of large companies to hire more people from poverty neighborhoods. All useful, but nothing in the process raised awareness that poverty is basically a problem of economic isolation. Poverty is not just about the money; it is about the absence of possibility due to our isolation across economic classes, between elite and marginalized neighborhoods, between schools and their neighborhoods, between the elderly and young people. If this isolation, which is the breakdown of community, does not hold center stage, then nothing important will shift. Well-intentioned leaders and citizens, without the consciousness and the tools to produce authentic community, will simply be left with more programs, more funding, and eventually another study to analyze progress.
The option, with respect to poverty, is to realize that people living in economic isolation have skills, wisdom, capacities, and productive entrepreneurial energy. They have assets we don’t see when we view them as problems to be analyzed, measured, and fixed. They don’t need more schooling, services, and programs. They need access and relatedness to the wider community. They need to be seen as citizens worthy of investment capital and loans. They need partnerships with people and institutions across class and geographical boundaries. They require real partnerships, not mentors. There must be relatedness and trust where both sides give and receive. Building this kind of community is central to a strategy to create conditions where real transformation occurs. This is what is working in a few special places. This is the point being made in this book.
Shifting this consciousness and clarifying the tools are what this revised edition is about. To summarize, the following is what I have tried to emphasize in this edition:
Isolation is on the rise. This book is about the reconciliation or restoration of the experience of community. It offers ways of thinking and practice to return to a sense of belonging that this mobile, modernist, novelty-seeking culture lacks. It is clear that the isolation in our institutions, cities, and larger world seems to be increasing rather than decreasing. The extremism and rigid ideology that flood all forms of public conversation are painful to witness and, to my mind, partial determinants of the violence that surrounds us. Although social media promises to connect us, we still sit in Starbucks, walk down the street, and dine together staring at a flat screen. To restore our connectedness, we need to see clearly the isolation we are part of and to not be taken in by the myth of communal progress.
Interest and practice in restoring community are increasing. This trend goes under the name of civic engagement, community building, organizational outreach, community relations, democracy projects, cooperative movements—all caring for the well-being of the whole. A small example of interest in engagement is that communities and organizations have been selecting Community to share in local book clubs.
Institutional awareness of the need for community is growing. The not-so-obvious insight is that restoring community is increasingly seen as a productive strategy to address business and civic concerns. What is important, and new, is that our traditional institutions, such as the church, are moving their attention and faith efforts outside their buildings and into their neighborhoods. Places of congregation are now in taverns, common houses, and storefronts.
Rabbis and pastors are leading the community-building movement in forms such as the Parish Collective based in Seattle and the Hive and Just Love in Cincinnati.
The city government of Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, is sponsoring an Abundant Community Initiative, which supports neighbors in identifying and gathering together the gifts of people on their block in projects aimed at producing more safety and revitalization.
The Rochester Health Foundation has an eight-year strategy to reduce major illnesses in the community by organizing residents in vulnerable neighborhoods to make their place better, addressing concerns that would seem to have nothing to do with major diseases. They are investing in such projects as beautification, community gardens, fixing up distressed buildings, and pushing drug traffic out. What does having residents care for their six-block area have to do with fighting cancer, diabetes, and heart disease? There is evidence that some of the major determinants of disease are social, relational, and communal.
When we have serious structural innovation in community engagement on the part of the church, the government, and foundations, something important is going on.
One more motivation for revising the book is to confront the reality that even when social pioneers do amazing work and manage to bring people together to make a place better, their work remains an untold story. It competes poorly for all the attention drawn to crisis. Building trust, relationships, and social capital as a strategy for improving health, well-being, and safety and for raising productive children does not make a lot of money for anybody and does not feed t
he media’s—social media included—appetite for drama and entertainment. What works in the world, as opposed to what is failing in the world, still gets treated as a human interest story.
All the more reason to keep clarifying why building community and belonging is going to be our most powerful strategy for ending the displacement and isolation that plagues so many aspects of our world. Building community is also a powerful strategy for creating resilient organizations, a healthier planet, and safer streets. The purpose of this book is to put the capacity to do this in the hands of citizens, supported, as a backup in the end, by the usual solutions of designing programs, making blueprints, getting funding, and trying all the things that institutions do.
The challenge in this enterprise is that building community seems too simple. If you choose to shift toward a context of possibility instead of staying with a context of deficiency, and you follow the questions and protocols outlined in part 2, you will discover how simple it is to end people’s isolation. When you reduce people’s isolation, they learn that they are not crazy and that there is nothing wrong with them. To this end, here is a preview of how I approached this edition:
• I have included more examples of how a shift to community building may be more powerful than traditional problem solving and programs. How we approach the persistence of the poverty scenario I describe here is one example. Interspersed throughout the text are more instances where social capital, the product of building community, is decisive in creating economic reform where it is most needed.
• In addition to amplifying the need for community and belonging, I show how really simple building community can be, once we decide it is essential. Overcoming isolation and creating belonging does not take a long time. Like yoga, it is about attention and practice and the mat you are on in the moment. It is not about the particular people and their agility or body shape, nor does it take years of effort. The structure of belonging is simply about getting the room right, forming small groups, getting the questions right, and putting a lid on our desire to rescue, fix, and train.