Book Talk on "Relationality: How Moving from Transactional to Transformational Relationships Can Reshape Our Lonely World"
Abstract: Book overview: For readers of Together and The Art of Gathering How moving from transactional to transformational relationships and organizations can save our democracy, nurture our connections, and make us happier and healthier.
Powerful institutions, from schools to tech and social media companies, create breeding grounds for isolation by failing to invest in relational work. This obstacle stands in the way of our fight for racial equity, economic justice, and climate resilience.
In Relationality, leading asexuality and relationship activist David Jay brings clarity to the crisis with a fresh perspective that expands upon the fundamental idea that all entities in the universe are connected. Jay draws from a range of vivid personal experiences, including his time spent helping tech workers and policymakers reform social media.
This book is for people who believe in the power of relationships and want to see increased investment in relational work. Its scientifically grounded framework will help readers foster conversations about relational work, establish conditions for relationships to thrive, and quantify the impact of them.
Equipping professionals and activists involved in nonprofit, political, and other types of relational work with the knowledge they need to fight for and utilize resources, Relationality shares valuable insight on: • The history of why institutions fail to invest in relationships • Reimagining ROI calculations to account for relational work • Using tools of prediction and emergence theory to build communities • How stories and data about relationships can help us direct resources toward relational work • Relational economics and the redistribution of wealth With isolation and loneliness on the rise in a post-lockdown world, Relationality offers a roadmap to nourish our connections toward a better, more liberated world—personally, organizationally, and in community.
This book talk will be facilitated by Val Elefante, Community Lead at Metagov.
game theoryhuman-computer interactionsocial and information networkslaw and economics
Audience: researchers in the discipline
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- - > > Meeting Link: us06web.zoom.us/j/89433841305?pwd=lIX1rkSiVfqDd7hwwTUppQS8kDmbno.1 < < - -
The Metagovernance Seminar invites individuals working in online governance to present their work to a community of other researchers and practitioners. Topics of the seminar include, but are not limited to, computational tools for governance, governance incidents and case studies from online communities, topics in cryptoeconomics, and the design of digital constitutions.
See archived videos: archive.org/search.php?query=creator%3A%22Metagovernance%20Seminar%22
The seminar is intended for researchers and practitioners in online governance, broadly defined. We welcome guests and curious members of the public, but please note that the discussion is moderated. Our governance structure is defined here: metagov.pubpub.org/metagov-governance
Please contact a planning committee member (Nathan Schneider, Divya Siddarth, Michael Zargham, Joshua Tan, and Seth Frey) if you are interested in becoming a member of the seminar.
Where available, a direct link to the archived video is linked beneath the video tags.
Join our community to participate in the discussions around this series: metagov.org/join/community
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- Time: every Wednesday at 12:00pm ET (GMT-4). - Meeting Link: us06web.zoom.us/j/89433841305?pwd=lIX1rkSiVfqDd7hwwTUppQS8kDmbno.1
| Organizers: | Joshua Tan*, Nathan Schneider*, Amy X. Zhang*, Eugene Leventhal*, Val Elefante*, Liz Barry |
| *contact for this listing |
