Participatory Practice

Page 84

3 The participatory worldview

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Jane Springett

The human being is essentially a holistic being who lives in integrated totalities. When the human being is forced to lead a fragmented life, he/she shrinks, is frustrated, diminished. (Skolimowski, 1994: 91) In Chapter 2 we began to explore some of the neoliberal thinking that underpins the structures and institutions that dominate current ways of relating economically, socially and politically, and how current trends seem to be reinforcing that dominance and resisting change towards an alternative way of being. Certainly, our democratic institutions, organisational structures and educational practices have continued to remain resilient to the changes that new forms of thinking imply. Indeed, many people appear to have become further entrenched in old thought processes and institutions have become even more alienating. There are, however, also signs of change suggesting that as the old order resists, there are green shoots of possibility. Central to that change is a shift in perspective and consciousness towards a radically different set of worldviews based on a participatory mindset. In this chapter, we take a deep dive into this alternative way of viewing the world and invite you to think about what this means in terms of the way we act in the world. In other words, what does seeing the world from an integrative or participatory perspective imply for our practice? In doing so we will be inviting you to look at the deep-seated roots of the dominant way of viewing the world, at least here in the West. A worldview is a belief set which groups hold consciously and unconsciously about their place in the world, and how the world works. Because this consciousness is collectivised beyond the individual, it is also socially and historically constructed. As such, it affects how people relate to each other and to the environment of which they are part. It also affects the consequential power structures that have evolved to maintain it. It pervades the stories about the world we tell ourselves. How you think the world operates and your place in it also influence how you act in the world to change it.

So, to engage in participatory practice, we need to hold a worldview – or story about the world that is different from that which currently dominates. It also requires a critical awareness of how the dominant worldview continues to pervade 65


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our practice So, what does thinking participatively really mean for our practice?

1min
page 109

Putting it all together: reframing our view of the world to change

4min
pages 107-108

Consciousness, the self and the spiritual

9min
pages 103-106

The Relational: cooperation, co-evolution and co-creation/co-production

4min
pages 101-102

Characteristics of a living system that help us to think participatively

7min
pages 98-100

The medicine wheel

6min
pages 93-96

Indigenous ways of knowing

2min
page 92

The Western mind

16min
pages 85-91

What do we care about? What are our values?

4min
pages 79-80

Kindness and kinship: a different lens for a decent future

5min
pages 81-83

3 The participatory worldview

2min
page 84

Whose lives matter?

3min
pages 77-78

A decade of ‘austerity’ Britain

4min
pages 71-72

Big electoral change from Right to Left (or so we thought

2min
page 70

At last, a critical analysis from a human rights perspective

4min
pages 73-74

Explore the question ‘Who gets to eat?’

1min
page 69

The year of the barricades that heralded an opportunity for change

4min
pages 65-66

The invention of neoliberalism

4min
pages 63-64

A missed opportunity

4min
pages 67-68

What is to come in this book

5min
pages 53-55

Towards collective health and well-being through participatory practice

2min
page 52

The Beveridge Report: a common good embedded in policy

2min
page 62

We are living through an epoch in world history

4min
pages 57-58

critical thinking Theme 8: Participatory practice as an ecological imperative

5min
pages 50-51

Theme 2: Participatory practice as a worldview

4min
pages 38-39

Theme 5: Participatory practice as interdependence and interbeing

6min
pages 44-46

Theme 6: Participatory practice as inner and outer transformation

4min
pages 47-48

1 Participatory practice

7min
pages 32-34

principles Theme 4: Participatory practice as a relational process

4min
pages 42-43

Theme 7: Participatory practice as living the questions and

2min
page 49

Theme 1: Participatory practice as social justice in action

2min
page 37

Theme 3: Participatory practice as the embodiment of values and

4min
pages 40-41
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