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Connected with 24 organizations
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Areas of Focus
Animal Welfare and Rights
(833 people) | Endangered Animal Species Protection
(1007 people) | Wildlife Ecology
(1118 people) | Performing Arts
(1277 people) | Arts Education
(1013 people) | Ecotourism
(1364 people) | Microcredit
(883 people) | Natural Capitalism
(1767 people) | Socially Responsible Investment
(1942 people) | Responsible Business Practices
(2021 people) | Corporate Ethics
(1543 people) | Children's Health
(986 people) | Juvenile Justice
(402 people) | Youth Capacity Building
(968 people) | Youth Education and Empowerment
(2455 people) | Youth Leadership
(1381 people) | Youth Participation
(1104 people) | Social Entrepreneurship
(2327 people) | Philanthropy
(957 people) | Organizational Support and Management
(1004 people) | Community Enterprise
(1298 people) | Community Participation
(2370 people) | Community Resources
(1310 people) | Community Service/Volunteerism
(1633 people) | Community Training
(1169 people) | Dialogue, Deliberation and Consensus-Building
(1385 people) | Fundraising
(1081 people) | Leadership Training
(1683 people) | Conservation and Recreation
(841 people) | Conservation and the Commons
(690 people) | Land Stewardship
(1222 people) | Cultural Diversity
(1789 people) | Cultural Heritage Conservation
(866 people) | Culture and Sustainability
(1913 people) | Traditional Culture
(1149 people) | Democracy and Civil Society
(1387 people) | Democracy Education
(676 people) | Democratic Participation
(1067 people) | Democratic Reform
(795 people) | Fair Electoral Process
(853 people) | Sustainability Education
(2915 people) | Access To Education
(1495 people) | Education, Government and Sustainability
(1391 people) | Alternative Fuels
(2098 people) | Energy Policy
(834 people) | Sustainable Energy Development
(2670 people) | Food Supply
(590 people) | Global Food Supply and Sustainability
(1737 people) | Hunger and Food Security
(946 people) | Local Food Systems
(1972 people) | Climate Change
(3174 people) | Greenhouse Gases
(1018 people) | Fair Trade
(1908 people) | Globalization Impacts
(1542 people) | Good Governance
(841 people) | Government Oversight and Reform
(477 people) | Institutional Accountability
(776 people) | Alternative Medicine
(1960 people) | Environmental Health
(1115 people) | Public Health
(860 people) | Climate Justice
(905 people) | Distributive and Economic Justice
(759 people) | Ethnic Equality
(728 people) | Human Rights and Civil Liberties
(1476 people) | Human Rights and Natural Law
(601 people) | Human Rights Education
(736 people) | Human Rights Monitoring
(443 people) | Human Rights Protection
(799 people) | Environmental Justice
(1521 people) | Social Justice Education
(1283 people) | Indigenous Lands
(934 people) | Indigenous People and Culture
(1959 people) | Indigenous Rights
(1281 people) | Crime and Policing
(228 people) | Environmental Law and Policy
(853 people) | International Humanitarian Law and War Crimes
(411 people) | Land Reform
(331 people) | Restorative Justice
(398 people) | Prison Reform and Policy
(335 people) | Internet
(1826 people) | Publishing
(799 people) | Video
(899 people) | Conflict Resolution
(1385 people) | Peace and Peace Building
(2235 people) | Protected Areas, Individuals, Objects and Property
(330 people) | Global Pollution
(905 people) | Energy Pollution
(597 people) | Pollution Prevention and Reduction
(885 people) | Human Population Growth and Impacts
(1066 people) | Refugees, Internally Displaced Persons, and Migrants
(700 people) | Sustainable Livelihoods
(2062 people) | Affordable Housing
(1134 people) | Crises and Disaster Aid
(473 people) | Poverty Alleviation
(1220 people) | Environmental Ethics
(1271 people) | Religion and Ecology
(899 people) | Sustainability, Religious and Spiritual Issues
(1910 people) | Sustainable Living
(2547 people) | Senior Volunteerism and Mentoring
(448 people) | Seniors' Health
(314 people) | Seniors' Rights and Participation
(337 people) | EcoVillages
(2025 people) | Infrastructure
(761 people) | Sustainable Communities
(2834 people) | Sustainable Transportation
(1325 people) | Sustainable Urban and Regional Planning
(1443 people) | Sustainable Urban Environmental Services
(818 people) | Sustainable Urban Power
(772 people) | Urban Communications
(515 people) | Urban Ecology
(1253 people) | Urban Revitalization
(909 people) | Sustainable Building
(2141 people) | Sustainable Materials
(1539 people) | Biological Development
(508 people) | Economic Development
(1292 people) | Rural Development
(1061 people) | Social Development
(1408 people) | Information and Communication Technology
(1152 people) | Sustainability and Technology
(1515 people) | Hydrology and the Global Water Cycle
(497 people) | Water and Energy
(737 people) | Water and Sustainable Development
(1346 people) | Water Supply and Conservation
(1093 people) | Gender Equality
(1233 people) | Women and the Environment
(907 people) | Women's Civic Participation
(502 people) | Women's Vocational Training
(417 people) | Worker Rights
(708 people) | Vocational Training
(517 people) | Employment
(855 people) | Living Wages
(963 people) | Worker Health and Safety
(452 people) | Women's Rights
(958 people) | Women's Health
(900 people) | Women's Safety from Violence
(709 people) | Women's Empowerment
(1245 people) | Women's Education
(775 people) | Women's Economic Development
(671 people) | Informal Economy
(568 people)
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It's ironic that I contributed to the creation of a new web-based technology that enables people to pool resources and engage in face-to-face interaction, but am totally techno challenged. A friend of mine, Habib Rose, who recently pasted away would hold my hand to show me how technology is a tool to grow extraordinary social networks. He introduced me to June Holley. Being a single parent with four children, I wanted to create a safetynet where I knew my kids would be safe and be "in community" with others who shared our "global family" philosophy. Rooted from a vision in 1986, I realized that loving they neighbor was an action...that we all part of an interwoven patchwork of human kindness. The trick was how do we get connected to on another, pool resources, self-organize activities and projects and have fun learning and growing together. What emerged from my 15 year commitment recruiting Good Neighbors who formed Family Support Networks across diverse community sectors was a process to create cohesive communities where people were free to be their authentic creative "being" in the world and contribute to the common good of all. Community Weaving was born in 2006 with the new technology that linked all the people and FSN's together to weave a new safetynet around the world. The Community Weaving model was published in The Change Handbook as a social change methodology that weaves the human and tangile resources of the grassroots with the skills and expertise of formal systems. This shifts the manner in which community systems function and integrates the voice of the people to restore democracy around the world. I received the Jefferson Award in 2007 for my contribution to this effort. It's considered a mini-nobel prize awarded to ordinary people doing extraordinary things. I'm a mother first and foremost and a good neighbor. It is my pleasure to weave community and watch how people are transformed in the process. I believe the more resourceful we are among ourselves, the more valuable a resource we become to our families, our communities and our world!
www.communityweaving.org www.familynetwork.org (tool to weave people together so they are less reliant on formal system to get their needs met and are able to initiate positive change in the world without waiting for permission). |
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Click to view 7-min video produced by Lifetime about our work in the world
It's ironic that I contributed to the creation of a new web-based technology that enables people to pool resources and engage in face-to-face interaction, but am totally techno challenged. A friend of mine, Habib Rose, who recently passed away would hold my hand to show me how technology is a tool to grow extraordinary social networks. Being a single parent with four children, I wanted to create a safetynet where I knew my kids would be safe and be "in community" with others who shared our "global family" philosophy. Rooted from a vision in 1986, I realized that loving thy neighbor was an extraordinary act that required knowledge about intention and our ability to fearlessly give and fearlessly receive deeds of love...that we all part of an interwoven patchwork of untapped human potential. Formal institutions can't care for people and are prevented from connecting people together because of policies and procedures ralated to confidenciality and liability restrictions. The trick was how do we get connected to one another, pool resources, self-organize activities and projects and have fun learning and growing together. What emerged from my 15 year commitment recruiting Good Neighbors who formed Family Support Networks across diverse community sectors was a process to create cohesive communities where people were free to be their authentic creative "being" in the world and contribute to the common good of all. It's easy to tap the creative and compassionate potential of your organization or community by weaving people together as Good Neighbors. Community Weaving was born in 2006 with the new technology at www.familynetwork.org that linked all the people together to weave a new safetynet around the world. This free technology was developed by volunteers and is our contribution to creating a more caring, just and civil society. Trained Community Weavers learn how to generate reports on how people's actions are impacting the world and quantifies it through volunteer hours. They can publish Village Resource Directories, an alphebetized list of resources broken down by skills, equipment and experience, at a push of a button. (Background checks required to access these reporting features). Community Weaving model was published in The Change Handbook as a social change methodology that weaves the human and tangile resources of the grassroots with the skills and expertise of formal systems. This shifts the manner in which community systems function and integrates the voice of the people to restore democracy around the world. I received the Jefferson Award in 2007 for my contribution to this effort. It's considered a mini-nobel prize awarded to ordinary people doing extraordinary things. I'm a mother first and foremost and a good neighbor. It is my pleasure to weave community and watch how people are transformed in the process. I believe the more resourceful we are among ourselves, the more valuable a resource we become to our families, our communities and our world!
I travel the world training Community Weavers how to grow Family Support Networks in their communities. I'm going to be a grandma in January, and I'm interested in training Master Weavers who will manifest Community Weaving around the globe. We consume less when we share more...so let's get out into the world and design creative ways to meet and engage with our neighbors who are members of our global family.
Community Weaving: Theory, principles, practice and diagrams:
www.communityweaving.org
Family Support Network website used for pooling grassroots and formal resources, self-organizing,
publishing resource directories, rosters and generating reports that
measure levels, frequency and types of service and engagement
www.familynetwork.org
The Family Support Network website is a tool developed by volunteers to weave people together so they can access resources to help themselves (to be less reliant on formal system to get their needs met ) and initiate positive change in the world without waiting for permission. It's free to sign up as a Good Neighbor to access a myriad of resources and share equity with global family members.) This is a survival strategy to reduce consumption of natural resources and generate a gifting economy to transform careless societies into caring communities.