Creating the World We Want to Live in: Reconnecting for a Sustainable Future

abstract: Human connection is fundamental for a shift toward sustainable societies. Small groups of people working in response to their unique conditions and environment can find joy in the co-creation of a shared existence. A collaborative network of related efforts can contribute to a broader und...

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Other Authors: Falstad, Beth Ann G (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.55611
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-556112020-01-15T03:01:11Z Creating the World We Want to Live in: Reconnecting for a Sustainable Future abstract: Human connection is fundamental for a shift toward sustainable societies. Small groups of people working in response to their unique conditions and environment can find joy in the co-creation of a shared existence. A collaborative network of related efforts can contribute to a broader understanding of resilience and adaptation, aiming toward a regenerative relationship with the Earth and all species. Such an approach ameliorates both pervasive loneliness and extreme inequity that have grown from modern consumerist individualism, through a strong focus on trust, respect and authenticity. I have created a structure to pursue these goals as an applied Sustainability researcher and artist. First, I present a tool that measures and guides community-based work to support the values of equity, justice, transformation and connection. I follow this with an in-depth process of qualitative inquiry grounded in an applied participatory design project to gain insight on the act of building connection across perceived divides. Finally, I share “The Building Community:” the group and process I formed with formerly homeless individuals who are co-designing a tiny home ecovillage of transitional supportive housing for homeless human beings in the Skid Row neighborhood of downtown Los Angeles. The Building Community method combines Council-style talking circles with elements of Action and Design research in which equal co-learners embark on a fun and challenging journey to nurture housing security, interconnectedness, and sustainability. The results of this research indicate an opportunity for community-based researchers to further incorporate support for the rights of nature, decolonization efforts and preservation of the commons into their projects. Flexible structure, consistency, balanced effort and shared decision making proved to build a strong foundation for group processes centered on trust. Finally, The Building Community showed that intimate local groups can produce abundant and creative sustainability solutions when partnered with academic guidance and resources. Sustainability scholars have the chance to balance power, amplify voices and make collective visions manifest if they immerse themselves in efforts on the ground. Dissertation/Thesis Falstad, Beth Ann G (Author) Cloutier, Scott (Advisor) Gee, James (Committee member) Sale, Gregory (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Sustainability Communication Social research Arts-based Community-based Dialogue Homelessness Participatory Sustainability eng 132 pages Doctoral Dissertation Sustainability 2019 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.55611 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 2019
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Sustainability
Communication
Social research
Arts-based
Community-based
Dialogue
Homelessness
Participatory
Sustainability
spellingShingle Sustainability
Communication
Social research
Arts-based
Community-based
Dialogue
Homelessness
Participatory
Sustainability
Creating the World We Want to Live in: Reconnecting for a Sustainable Future
description abstract: Human connection is fundamental for a shift toward sustainable societies. Small groups of people working in response to their unique conditions and environment can find joy in the co-creation of a shared existence. A collaborative network of related efforts can contribute to a broader understanding of resilience and adaptation, aiming toward a regenerative relationship with the Earth and all species. Such an approach ameliorates both pervasive loneliness and extreme inequity that have grown from modern consumerist individualism, through a strong focus on trust, respect and authenticity. I have created a structure to pursue these goals as an applied Sustainability researcher and artist. First, I present a tool that measures and guides community-based work to support the values of equity, justice, transformation and connection. I follow this with an in-depth process of qualitative inquiry grounded in an applied participatory design project to gain insight on the act of building connection across perceived divides. Finally, I share “The Building Community:” the group and process I formed with formerly homeless individuals who are co-designing a tiny home ecovillage of transitional supportive housing for homeless human beings in the Skid Row neighborhood of downtown Los Angeles. The Building Community method combines Council-style talking circles with elements of Action and Design research in which equal co-learners embark on a fun and challenging journey to nurture housing security, interconnectedness, and sustainability. The results of this research indicate an opportunity for community-based researchers to further incorporate support for the rights of nature, decolonization efforts and preservation of the commons into their projects. Flexible structure, consistency, balanced effort and shared decision making proved to build a strong foundation for group processes centered on trust. Finally, The Building Community showed that intimate local groups can produce abundant and creative sustainability solutions when partnered with academic guidance and resources. Sustainability scholars have the chance to balance power, amplify voices and make collective visions manifest if they immerse themselves in efforts on the ground. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Sustainability 2019
author2 Falstad, Beth Ann G (Author)
author_facet Falstad, Beth Ann G (Author)
title Creating the World We Want to Live in: Reconnecting for a Sustainable Future
title_short Creating the World We Want to Live in: Reconnecting for a Sustainable Future
title_full Creating the World We Want to Live in: Reconnecting for a Sustainable Future
title_fullStr Creating the World We Want to Live in: Reconnecting for a Sustainable Future
title_full_unstemmed Creating the World We Want to Live in: Reconnecting for a Sustainable Future
title_sort creating the world we want to live in: reconnecting for a sustainable future
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.55611
_version_ 1719308530556600320