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Showing posts with label Chris Game. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chris Game. Show all posts

Thursday, 22 March 2012

Our shed and all it contains

Katzanzakis wrote 'Να αγαπάς την ευθύνη. Να λες: Εγώ μονάχος μου έχω χρέος να σώσω τη γης. Άμα δε σωθεί εγώ θα φταίω' 'Love responsibility. Say: It is my duty, and mine alone, to save the earth. If it is not saved, then I alone am to blame.' Arundhati Roy - my heroine - is especially good on wealth made through plunder in alliance with bribed governments.
'Capitalism’s real “grave-diggers” may end up being its own delusional Cardinals, who have turned ideology into faith. Despite their strategic brilliance, they seem to have trouble grasping a simple fact: Capitalism is destroying the planet. The two old tricks that dug it out of past crises -War and Shopping - simply will not work.' 
Alternatives to state-market collaboration are many. They are diverse; less visible for being, like bacilli or viruses, small. Wander through work associated with Elinor Ostrom:
 ...contemporary research on the outcomes of diverse institutional arrangements for governing common-pool resources (CPRs) and public goods of multiple scale builds on classical economic theory while developing new theory to explain phenomena that do not fit in a dichotomous world of 'the market' and 'the state.' Scholars are slowly shifting from positing simple systems to using more complex frameworks, theories, and models to understand the diversity of puzzles and problems facing humans interacting in contemporary societies...
Ostrom challenges widespread scepticism about community self-organisation in managing common pool resources (CPR) - 'game theory' and the 'tragedy of the commons'. Both paradigms suggest people can't be trusted; that either the market or the state or, in Roy's analysis, state-market collaboration, are essential antidotes to the chaos that is inevitable if people are allowed to self-organise. All of us educated by The Lord of the Flies are nearly right. Our hope lies in the dream that they-we are not absolutely right. Ostrom and her colleagues at Indiana, but also quite separate researchers, have analysed cases of failure, semi-failure, partial success and success from all over the world in governing common pool resources. Shared learning and diffusion of that learning is beginning to upset the traditional model of rich-to-poor aid. We 'rich' have much to learn from cases of self-organisation driven by the pressure to survive -invented and sustained in poorer countries. Seek out examples to move away from looking only to state or market, capitalism or communism.
I should have avoided the word 'allowed' in the context of 'self-organisation'. Even as they may promote it (Big Society for example) governments and corporations will undermine it in the way Roy describes, with seduction and - if forced - violence, preceded and accompanied by subtle and relentless spin. (a mild example: central-local double-speak in the case of UK local government by my friend and colleague Chris Game)
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An email just received  an abstract I submitted for an academic conference in Minneapolis next September:
Thank you for your submission in response to the call for papers for the upcoming Creating Public Value in a Multi-Sector, Shared-Power World conference. We received a remarkable response to the call, with many strong papers.  After careful review... (at this point I know it's not good news)...by faculty advisers from a variety of fields, we regret to inform you that your paper was not selected for inclusion. However, we hope your interest in the creation of public value will inspire you to attend the conference September 20-22, 2012 in Minneapolis, MN, USA. You can access the conference website and registration information here. Thank you again for your interest and your commitment to the study of public value in a multi-sector, shared-power world.  Kind Regards, John Bryson, Ph.D. McKnight Presidential Professor of Planning and Public Affairs
When it comes to applying for jobs, submitting papers or a thousand other endeavours I assume anything from a 10-1 failure rate upwards.  This doesn't mean I'm not miserable, vexed and chagrined - switching between 'sour grapes' excuses to myself and recognition my abstract wasn't interesting enough:
PROBING THE HEART OF DEMOCRACY WITH VIDEO...In the working conversations between politicians and administrators in government, values, whether as means or ends, are seldom spoken directly. Research access to such conversations...though a popular focus of fictional drama, is problematic. Since the 1980s, Baddeley has been refining methods for exploring how local government politicians and managers work together at what Weber called the greatest source of tension in the modern social order − the relationship between democracy and bureaucracy...As the methodology has been refined, it becomes easier to record the way values are embroidered into conversations about what is technically, legally and financially workable. Film has the benefit of recording verbal, non-verbal and para-linguistic exchanges, allowing minute examination of their dynamic. While film provides no special guarantee of unique authenticity, (the) methodology determines a contract between researcher and participants and their future audience which frames, for further investigation, an exchange between them that is always going to be a performance – but one that the participants are prepared to have presented for analysis as part of the value to which those involved in a public relationship of government...are committed. 
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Friday morning Lin drove us south-west 70 miles down the M5, M50 to Ross-on-Wye...
Ross-on-Wye on the way to Lydbrook
...and on to Lydbrook six miles further south on the edge of the Forest of Dean, where Royston is slowly and steadily making repairs to Rock Cottage. Since the children grew up and we started living to and fro - πέρα δόθε - between Ano Korakiana and Handsworth, we've neglected it. It's up Bell Hill, way up a steep narrow path some way from the highway, now nigh impossible for our parents.
There are few builders we've trusted as much as Royston. We suggest work; he assesses it; sends us a quote; we approve and refine the detail; he gets on with the work; lets us know when it's completed; we pay and discuss the next stage. Our neighbours - Kirsti and Paul -  a few yards away also keep us informed on the work, which started from the outside stopping ways in which damp had been entering some parts of the upper floor. With the roof and eaves sealed, there's a lot more to do.
A ceiling has been replaced in one bedroom, a wall lined in another, and now Royston will set about giving us a quote for replacing several window frames, two doors and sealing and painting exterior walls.
"When that's done we can stay here again" I said
"...and Amy and Richard will come without us."
"That's fine. That's OK. They'd never let us sell the place anyway."
Our hope -  to have all work completed by Summer 2013.
Richard and Linda at Rock Cottage - a summer long ago


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The best article I've yet read on the enormously sensible Greek Property Tax, written last September but updated by An American in Athens - a superlative blog. Her article carefully copyrighted, long and rich in detail and illustration, especially on interpreting information about the tax as it appears on electricity bills, measuring properties, exemptions (for types of disability and property), penalties for non-payment, multipliers based on zone and house age, appeals against assessment, future changes currently planned - including the spreading of payments over the year and a future shift away from collecting the new property tax via electric bills to separate bills - likely to start in 2013. People like us, as my grandmother used to say, ought to pay rather more tax, especially death duties. I agree even as I make as sure as I can that I have checked legal means of not paying. I have a relative who regards all tax as 'theft'; does not believe there is such a thing as a public good and regards HM the Queen with her persistent sympathies for the less well off as a dangerous left-winger.
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My mum's had a chicken run built at the end of her house, robust enough to keep out the Pine Martin - more of a threat than fox or rats in Strathnairn. Once the risk of a final cold spell is passed her chickens will move in - four or five now her carer's approval is won.
"Fine" said Sharon "as long as there's no cockerel"
"I'm going" mum told me "to have a pair of Rhode Island Reds and some of those speckled Scots Dumpies."
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Meanwhile in Ano Korakiana:
Η προσπάθεια συνεχίζεται αμείωτη...efforts continue unabated...following last Sunday's Agricultural Cooperative AGM, the registration of new shareholders...with a strong probability the necessary numbers will be recruited by the end of the month. Several young people have responded to the challenge, as well as subscribers from the wider region. Some cases remind us of the situation (one of many) when the family of Kontostanou Chariklia, in the 1930s when the Cooperative was striving to expand its facilities in an even more difficult economic environment. Shareholders took out mortgages on their properties to guarantee the loan needed for the Cooperative...So when, at Christmas, Kontostanou Chariklia's mother had tried to "sacrifice" one of her chickens to make lemon sauce,  αυγολέμονο, her husband had to stop her; telling her the chicken, and indeed the whole coop, was already mortgaged for the Co-op....below, a jar of sweet figs to go with Mrs Metallinos' recent registration
Nitsa Metallinos registers for the Co-op
Στον απόηχο της Γενικής Συνέλευσης του Αγροτικού Συνεταιρισμού του χωριού μας την περασμένη Κυριακή, η προσπάθεια για την εγγραφή νέων συνεταίρων συνεχίζεται αμείωτη, ώστε να καλυφθεί με ασφάλεια ο στόχος, έως το τέλος του μήνα. Μεταξύ άλλων, αρκετοί νέοι σε ηλικία έχουν προσφερθεί για τη στήριξη του δύσκολου εγχειρήματος, αλλά ακόμη και άτομα από την ευρύτερη περιοχή. Και δεν είναι λίγες οι περιπτώσεις που οι παλαιότεροι, μας υπενθυμίζουν την περίπτωση (μία από τις πολλές) της οικογένειας της Κοντοστάνου Χαρίκλειας, στα μέσα της δεκαετίας του 1930, όταν ο Συνεταιρισμός επιχειρούσε τότε να επεκτείνει τις εγκαταστάσεις του σε ένα αρκετά πιο δύσκολο οικονομικό περιβάλλον. Όλοι λοιπόν οι συνέταιροι είχαν βάλει τότε υποθήκη τμήματα της περιουσίας τους, προκειμένου να εξασφαλιστεί η δανειοδότηση του Συνεταιρισμού...Όταν λοιπόν, τα Χριστούγεννα η μάννα της Χαρίκλειας είχε επιχειρήσει να «θυσιάσει» μια από τις κότες που είχε στο κοτέτσι της για το αυγολέμονο, ο σύζυγός της την απέτρεψε ενημερώνοντας την ότι (και) το κοτέτσι τους είχε μπει στην υποθήκη για  το Συνεταιρισμό…...Όπως το βάζο με γλυκό σύκο, που προσέφερε η κα Νίτσα Μεταλληνού, μαζί με την εγγραφή της στο Συνεταιρισμό.

Friday, 5 June 2009

Visiting Chris Game

I cycled over to Edgbaston via the restored Harborne Way that starts in Summerfield Park. The City Council have nearly completed a nice job here, creating a walking and cycling path, pied in the morning sun seeping through the green overhang, along an old railbed that threads through Rotton Park between the backs of houses with a convenient exit on the Hagley Road close to Chris Game's home in Edgbaston, thinking of warm Democracy Street, humming "Ena to helidoni"...
You walled me inside the mountains
You closed me in the sea
Chris welcomed me to his flat surrounded by woodland in the midst of the city; the first time I''d visited him off campus in 30 years. "With a lion and a skull you'd be Dürer's St.Jerome." (one of my favourite images - educated undisturbed contemplation - ηρεμία). I was helping Chris go over the film clips from my archive he hopes to use during a course next week on member-officer relations - an event which he's tutoring instead of me, after a dismaying failure of communication between me and some of the young hopefuls enrolled on earlier sessions of the same programme last summer. Chris is the first of my Birmingham colleagues interested in using my films to teach about political-management relationships*. He needs to be confident in linking what he's saying to a suitable selection of clips. Teachers have little trouble showing set-piece films from start to finish; "Now we'll watch a film after which we'll discuss it." The challenge to helping people learn in this area has been one of mingling film, talk and conversation, switching between clips, showing a few seconds to a few minutes, stopping, reversing, revisiting, comparing, playing without sound to observe NVC; switching smoothly between a range of thumbnails expanded to full size and then minimised again to view another conversation. I've assembled four clips, used as examples in a recent book chapter on political-management leadership, on a DVD which, thank goodness, we were able to work through on his computer. MPG, AVI and MOV files were not recognised on Chris's PC - a problem I'm often encountering because none of my colleagues, including Chris, works with film extracts. Chris also knows about the pages on Democracy Street in which I've embedded extracts from films of politicians and managers in conversation with notes and transcripts.
In a few years I suspect more people will, as I do now, see it as bizarre that it is impossible to embed film in a refereed academic paper. The spread of electronic journals will make this easier, and my material more accessible.
*The first person to replicate the approach of filming politicians and managers in conversation about their working relationship has been Professor John Martin at Latrobe University, NSW, Australia, with his interest in 'negotiating the overlap'.
Email from Richard Baddeley, Sat 6 Jun 2009 To: Simon Baddeley Subject: this is good

http://www.yuuguu.com/home

Email from me to John Martin:

Dear John. Hope you're well.

http://www.yuuguu.com/home

This piece of software seems v.easy to load and allows us to share each others screens - including Mac to Windows. Once you've signed up, we make each other contacts by entering each other's emails when asked, Then I get to see your screen and v.v. We can look at a video for instance which is on your screen or v.v. See what you think. Love to all

John's reply:

What a great idea! I will download the software so we can simultaneously view the interviews. I will post the latest interview on DVD to you on Tues (Mon Queen's Birthday holiday). Cold, grey and drizzling rain Sat, much appreciated by the garden...I now have an interview sched for XX and possibly GG late June. If I can also get ZZ that will make five for us to work on. Should be enough for this year? In any case I will keep asking CEOs if they would like to be part of this work and build up a catalogue over time, in much the same way as you have. Cheers, John

PS tell Chris Game I saw the Dutch get the one day series off to a good start

Me to John:

Uh oh! I've just read this review that says Yuuguu won't work for sharing videos:

http://www.pcadvisor.co.uk/reviews/index.cfm?reviewid=104363

We can always try, but I thought it might be too good to be true. Perhaps you could pass a request to your IT experts about the kind of 'interoperability' we want. But it looks like a bandwidth problem. It's clear we're on a bit of a frontier here which is frustrating but challenging. In the meantime we're still relying on 'steam-mail'. Best S

* * *

After my meeting with Chris I phoned Richard. "Meal in town?" I got as far as Five Ways and thought 'Ikon Gallery', headed that way and parked my bicycle in the lobby. An installation exploring time at Perrott's Folly was advertised at 1300. "Before we eat let's meet there". Over thirty years I've seen that old redbrick tower and its neighbour in the Waterworks and passed on by. They may have brought an idea to J.R.Tolkien who spent part of his childhood close to these two towers. Two gallery staff arrived to open the iron gate into a small yard leading to the entrance door and the narrow spiral stairs that led upwards through six floors. At the top there were so many small clocks ticking away we could only go in the room one at a time - a crumble walled magical circular space looking out over the surrounding rooftops and trees which with a fire burning merrily in a small iron grate must have made the cosiest of crow's nests for its creator.
* * *
Oliver Lowenstein has written to me about his new Fourth Door Review reminding me there's now a touring exhibition featuring his Cycle Stations Project, an idea he floated a decade ago, a vision of a sustainable equivalent of placeless motorway service stations. Part supported by Sustrans and Brompton it's called Riding on Empty: Designing our travel infrastructure for the end of oil. I shall seek it's next appearance. O's flier says a website's coming up. Like the exhibition in Perrott's Folly, there's a lot of writing in Fourth Door that cannot penetrate the carapace of common-sense I use to negotiate the present; blocking insight, rejecting what's counter-intuitive, circumventing revelation. I watch, listen, scan this stuff allowing it to seap into liminal tracts separate from that unreliable dimension that practical men call 'the real world' - the personally maintained co-ordinates of my own Truman Show. Imagine trying to explain computer virus's in the 1980s, let alone Skype, Facebook, peak-oil or podcasting. All were anticipated, being invented and discussed by a minority, enjoying speculation outside the normative gaze. Could anyone, in 1985, have convinced me I would regard the bicycle as my favourite way of getting about with the support of buses and trains; that I would divorce my car.
Cycling on Democracy Street, Ano Korakiana
* * * Waging peace. Obama's speech, Cairo 4 June 2009 [text] and see Nikos Konstandaras' comment in Kathimerini 6 June 2009
....and the international impact of Michelle Obama's 'White House Garden' from Alternet 1.5.09

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Simon Baddeley