92 lines
4.8 KiB
Plaintext
92 lines
4.8 KiB
Plaintext
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Process is Necessary but Not Sufficient:
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A Consideration of the Circle Pines Conference in Michigan, 18-20 Nov 94.
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--by Crafty
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Abstract
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The conference came from a need to grasp and solve problems which
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threaten the longevity and efficacy of various anarchist groups or projects,
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and was to be a way of making these problems visible and discussable. It met
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with mixed success. Group problems must be seen in larger scope than
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what the conference offered.
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Technique is Not Enough
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The conference focussed mostly on aspects of group activity that I call
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technical skills. These went under the general heading of "group
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process/dynamics/roles," and came out in practice as workshops on the use of
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consensus and on roles people might take in groups. These workshops were
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followed up in small discussion sections ("mini-collectives").
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A severe, but subtle, shortcoming of the conference was its framing
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of group difficulties and survivability problems as matters of technique.
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Even in my discussion section, where the stated topics collapsed and
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gave way to self-selection, people remained within the orbit of technique
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and did not offer fundamentally different types of reasons for why groups
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fail. Causes other than "unhealthy group process" seemed so far from
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the scope of the conference that I did not care to make an issue of it.
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Dysfunctional group processes no doubt exist, and are usually
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conspicuous in the downfall of any group. But the story of how a group comes
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to eventual ruin is always both more involved and more particular than
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a simple reduction to the effect of "bad internal dynamics." That's just too
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easy to say. It excuses the ex-group from harder and more frightening
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questions of its motivating agenda and reason-for-being.
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My fundamental belief about group process is that people will
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self-organize and act to solve, or at least isolate, their internal
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problems if it's worth their while. This is a big If, bigger than any
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catalogue of roles and methods. Sound techniques for organizing and
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getting along in groups are of course indispensable. But they will not save a
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group that is doomed for basically existential reasons. Internal troubles
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are a group's executioner, not its judge.
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Identity Conflict is Not a "Process Issue"
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Also on the agenda was the topic of "isms." For purposes of the
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conference this was framed as identity-based conflicts which "foster an
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inability to follow process" and was thus allied with technical issues. But I
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think the identity question deserves more comprehensive treatment than just
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discussing its effect on "cohesion" and "established process."
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An "isms discussion," in my observation, is always hectic because its
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basic modes of conflict go unexamined. It's too easy (as usual) to call it a
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clash between "racism and equality", "sexism and equality", etc.
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Realistically, it's a multi-faceted struggle between different concepts of
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group organization and different motives for participating in a group in the
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first place, as well as the various forms of identity-based conflict (which
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I have no interest in referring to as isms).
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I can't say much concretely about this part of the conference since I
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backed out after fifteen minutes, thinking I knew where its trajectory would
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take it. Just to summarize my stance, I am becoming less and less sympathetic
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to the "breaking down barriers" view, in which group identities are real but
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manufactured by an oppressor class to keep people divided. I see identities as
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more self-existent than that. I'm inclined to take the barriers
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(ie differences) for granted, and work more towards alliance between discrete
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independent factions instead of unification into "the collective."
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Conclusion
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The most positive end effect of this conference would be: People
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realize that group process is an important but at best partial influence on
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making or breaking a group. They prioritize clarity of their groups' goals and
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reason-to-be over any particular doctrine of process, and thereby retain the
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flexibility to choose processes that best serve their goals.
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The worst thing would be this: People accept the discussion of process
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as somehow definitive of why groups fail, and suffer a double blow if their
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own group collapses despite having learned sound technical skills.
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I anticipate the result will fall somewhere in the middle of the
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spectrum. My intent is to deflect it as far as possible to the better end,
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and I hope to develop this thought more extensively in a future piece which
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will be less specific to the conference itself.
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Having been to a small handful of gatherings, I'm more or less
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reconciled that informal networking is the main value of the events. I'll
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probably continue to go for that reason, if nothing else. And for lessons
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in vegan cooking.
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28 Nov 94
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