Today I am completing my blog series on power in cooperative groups:
Part 1: Yourself
Part 2: You and a New Group
Part 3: You, and an Established Group that is Not Committed to Cooperative Culture
Part 4: You, and an Established Group that Is Committed to Operating Cooperatively
While
being "committed to operating cooperatively" will not, alas,
necessarily mean that the group has discussed power and its distribution
in the group, at least you should be able to count on a constructive
response when that request bubbles up. I expect, for instance,
cooperative groups to understand the distinction between "power over"
and "power with," and to not be stuck on the naive hope that power can
be evenly distributed in the group.
In
the best groups (the ones furthest along in working well with power),
you'll find four distinctive features. (I'm aiming pretty high here, so
don't get discouraged if your group isn't doing any of these yet—much
less all of them.)
1. They'll be able to handle conversations about the misuse of power without going thermonuclear
This is not easy to do. In fact, most groups don't have these kind of conversations at all. They are just too scary. Yet the reverse is scary, too—where people only discuss it in the parking lot.
A
claim that power has been misused is, essentially, an accusation that
someone used their influence for the benefit of some, and at
the expense of others. This type of criticism commonly gets translated
into
impugning one's integrity and it can be hard to create a container
strong
enough to hold all the energy and to preserve the relationships. Handled
poorly this kind of conflict can split a group in two. Not pretty.
So
being able to work power at this depth requires that the group be able
to handle conflict deftly. It's a tall order, yet it's something the
group needs to do well anyway.
2. Power will be expressly be included in new member orientation
While
it doesn't seem to be that difficult to articulate the concept of
"power with" it's been my experience that groups rarely discuss power
dynamics with new folks because it tends to be a work in progress and
the group may not be that proud of what it's accomplished.
If
someone asked me what to look for when visiting a group they were
considering joining, I'd suggest they pay particular attention to how
openly the group discuses how power is distributed. If they are not open
with you up front, how can you count on it getting better?
3. The group will have a plan for developing the leadership capacity of all members
This
is a definite step beyond recognizing how power is distributed in the
group, and being able to talk about imbalances openly. If you do not
have the distribution you want, how can you remedy that? While you
cannot simply give people power (influence), you can purposefully invest
in them and in their leadership capacity. You can give them
opportunities to lead that are appropriate to whatever development stage
they're at. You can invest in your members so that they will be more
influential in the future as they accumulate experience.
4. Managers and committees will be regularly evaluated
For
this to make sense, there need to be job descriptions and an
enumeration of the qualities wanted in people filling positions in the
group. This establishes objective standards against which to assess
performance. Further, it should be some group's job (Personnel
Committee?) to see that this happens on a regular rotation and with a
consistent, caring process. (Heaven help you if you only dust off
evaluations when someone has been coloring outside the lines or is
shirking their duties and you want to slap their wrists—it'll be a
bloodbath.)
Evaluations
should be may things: time for tweaking and improving mandates, a time
for mid-course corrections, and a time to celebrate what's working well.
Friday, January 20, 2017
You, and an Established Group that Is Committed to Operating Cooperatively
• • •
If
a group is hitting on all four of these cylinders, there should be
plenty of power for acceleration and braking as needed. But even if you
aren't running on those four levels (yet), consider it a blueprint for
the peppy group vehicle you always wanted.at 4:59 PM
Labels: power, power in cooperative groups
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