The excellent Wageningen UR Centre for Development Innovation organised, last September, a seminar on social learning and networking. I couldn't go to the workshop but a colleague of mine attended it and shared the report, and so finally I got to read the seminar report and found a lot of useful insights in it.
Published on: 29/03/2011
I have put my selection of insights below. Find the full file available at the bottom of this post - or online.
The seminar focused on various multi-stakeholder processes - a key theme of the WUR - and so here are some of the useful insights I found. And some reflections follow thereafter.
Phew! And this is just my selection - so do read this report, it is rich and informative.
What I take from this report is that increasingly multi-stakeholder processes (MSPs) are recognised as useful solutions for complex development issues, even though we should also understand the limitations of such processes (funding mechanisms, pre-conditions to make it work etc.), in other words MSPs are not another silver bullet, even though they do have a lot of potential and merits.
The importance of awareness and consciousness about learning in the process is central. Sometimes it feels as though we are just 'building some learning patches' onto our projects and initiatives, while the purpose is central and goes way beyond quick fixes. I love the focus on reflexivity because I really think that is the key to sustainable development: stepping back and reflecting about what is going on. If we want to achieve change at scale, it is this we must encourage and nurture among ourselves as individuals, organisations, teams, sectors and societies.
Also the work around diversity of stakeholders reminds me more and more of Valerie Brown's and IKM-Emergent's body of work on multiple knowledges. See our sources of inspiration for more on this. With that diversity comes a host of issues relating to speaking a common language - to reach out to that common vision.
Finally, the authenticity of learning is also an important finding from this report. Learning is about reflecting but the deeper and more frank the reflection, the better it is for everyone. This means talking openly about mistakes and about weaknesses (I've been blogging about this recently on a KM harvesting ideas post). This again is a long term process built in the clay of trust, authenticity, inspiration and curiosity. We will have to think about these issues for our learning alliance and resource centre network processes too.
In the meantime, we keep questioning!
(By Ewen)
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