Towards a New Order of Community Participation



The following is an experiment in outlining a proposed contract between participants in a sustainable community. In the spirit of depth psychology, it is designed to acknowledge specifically the pattern of interacting roles at the shadowy "roundtable" hidden within every sustainable community. This roundtable and the relationships are illustrated by Figure 1. The emphasis is on the nature of the specific contractual bonds between participants. The text was developed from an analogous text relating to a Meeting Participant Contract in Towards a New Order of Meeting Participation (1993)


Community participant role reminder

1. We are less rewarded for our involvement in a meeting when we assume that our role has been more central to its processes than when we are able to question its value to other participants.
2. We degrade and pollute the meeting environment more when we assume that any negative impacts of our initiatives on other participants are of little consequence than when we have doubts concerning the ability of the meeting to deal with them.
3. We exhibit a greater degree of ignorance in a meeting when we assume the adequacy of the knowledge we demonstrate than when we question its validity from the perspectives of other participants.
4. Our contributions are less nourishing and enlivening to other participants when we assume that they are naturally fruitful than when we question their fruitfulness to others.
5. We contribute more to the mismanagement of a meeting when we assume that our favoured procedures are the most useful to other participants than when we have doubts concerning their efficacy for others.
6. We are less productive in a meeting when we assume we are responding productively to other contributions than when we have doubts concerning the contribution of our efforts to the productivity of other initiatives.
7. We are more threatening to other participants when we assume that our role is not experienced as intimidating and discriminating by some than when we question how others may be threatened by our actions in the meeting.
8. We bring more malaise to a meeting when we assume that we are paragons of well-being than when we have doubts concerning our degree of health in the eyes of others.
9. We are more exploitative in a meeting when we assume that our initiatives do not impoverish the experience of other participants than when we question this possibility.
10. We make more inappropriate contributions to a meeting when we assume that they are naturally appropriate than when we have doubts concerning their degree of appropriateness to other participants.
11. The representation of reality that we endeavour to communicate to other participants is experienced as more incoherent when we assume that it offers unique integrative advantages than when we question whether this may be the case for others.
12. We are more effective in turning cultural and religious celebrations into meaningless rituals when we assume that they are not experienced as such by some than when we question why this may indeed be the case. 

Community participant contract

0. Preamble
0.1 Since it is in the minds (and hearts) of sustainable community participants that the problems of the world emerge, it is in our minds (and hearts) as participants that these issues should be addressed. Endeavouring to respond to societal problems as though they were purely external and distant, fails to respond to the mind-set which continues to reinforce them and ensures their continuing unfruitful treatment in the sustainable community environment.
0.2 The collective impotence of the 1990s (including the creative diplomatic delays over Yugoslavia, Somalia and the Sudan) justifies a certain impatience with regard to conventional sustainable community processes. The low expectations and levels of satisfaction associated with events like the Rio Earth Summit suggest the need for a sharper focus and a more radical evaluation of sustainable community performance. The systems of checks and balances, or challenge and support, need to be rendered more explicit in sustainable communities. There is a need for "tighter ships" following the limited successes associated with sustainable community permissiveness in the past decades.
0.3 The conceptual and behavioral challenges of "sustainable development" are too easily projected onto the formulation of larger, global strategies conveniently beyond the control or responsibility of individual community participants.
0.4 Sustainable community participants need to take greater responsibility for the quality of the community as a whole rather than designing personal participation strategies which effectively delegate such responsibilities to others. Participants can no longer afford to be primarily concerned with their own track or function. Operational content needs to be consciously given to values such as solidarity or the Japanese concept of group harmony ("wa").
0.5 In endeavouring to respond to the challenges of sustainable community structures and processes, the tendency to delegate or allocate responsibility to another is somewhat similar to electing a "mummy" or a "daddy" or a "police chief" -- leaving the electors free to be playfully disobedient and to scorn any seemingly heavy-handed disciplinary measures. It is part of the problem for which each participant needs to take greater personal responsibility.
0.6 Each role in a sustainable community is supported and handicapped by other roles. The task in the community, as in wider society, may be seen as one of becoming conscious of and working with the complementarity of these roles in order to achieve higher orders of consensus and sustainability.
0.7 Can sustainable communities and their participants cultivate a greater sense of self-awareness, self-reflexiveness, or sense of presence appropriate to the challenges of the times?
0.8 The following draft invites further revisions that build in sharper and clearer understanding of the lessons for sustainable community processes from the major clusters of social challenges that tend to be their concern. It is valuable to see the roots of such challenges in the dynamics of sustainable communities -- where people as participants may well find the clues to more creative responses to the equivalent problems in wider societies.

Contractual Bonds between Community Participants

Acknowledgement of Interacting Roles at the Shadowy Roundtable Hidden within every Sustainable Community
Each of the roles below is positioned around a "roundtable" in an accompanying diagram (https://www.laetusinpraesens.org/docs90s/roundc.php). The relationships between the roles below are indicated on the diagram. You can click back from any role in the diagram to the description below.

Role 1. "Unemployment" Metaphor
Contractually, this role calls for each participant to respond to the tension between waiting for opportunities offered by others and creating opportunities which others will find beneficial in the sustainable community. It also requires that each be attentive to the ways in which his/her initiatives effectively exploit others without appropriately recompensing them.
We are less rewarded for our involvement in a sustainable community when we assume that our role has been more central to its processes than when we are able to question its value to other participants.
In this mode each experiences the anguish of being underemployed in the sustainable community. This may be perceived as the failure of others to acknowledge the role that s/he performs in the gathering or their failure to create openings to make use of the skills that s/he brings to the event. As a consequence there is a frustration at not being able to contribute effectively, associated with a sense of not being appropriately rewarded for what s/he has to offer. But at the same time, and when given the opportunity, each will tend exploitatively to use what others have to offer, offering minimal acknowledgement and psychic rewards.
More fundamentally, through this mode the sustainable community and the participants are challenged as to how to make best use of the opportunities of the occasion and how to be appropriately rewarded. The frustrations of underemployment can easily expose participants to a sense of alienation and purposelessness.
Role relationships:
  • Challenge: Responding to the constraint of fairness (Role 7) in undertaking significant initiatives (Role 1).
  • Complementarities: Reconciling opportunities for significant initiatives (Role 1) with the dilemmas of exploitation (Role 9) and of appropriate management (Role 5).
  • Systemic formal equivalents: Developmental and expansion orientation also common to product development (Role 10), procedural development (Role 7), and population development (Role 4).

Role 2. "Degradation of environment" Metaphor
Contractually, this role calls for each participant to take on a stewardship capacity in caring for the many features of the cultural ecosystem constituted by the sustainable community. This involves recognition of the build up of potentially negative consequences of any intervention and the manner in which others must be depended upon to help render them innocuous.
We degrade and pollute the sustainable community environment more when we assume that any negative impacts of our initiatives on other participants are of little consequence than when we have doubts concerning the ability of the sustainable community to deal with them.
In this mode each degrades the sustainable community environment by exploiting the resources it offers in ways that ultimately threaten its viability. As a socio-cultural ecosystem, the sustainable community is effectively a habitat for a wide range of psycho-social roles. Conventional sustainable community processes, that are most "productive" in the short term, exploit this system in ways which progressively degrade it and deprive it of any capacity to renew itself. Favoured sustainable community processes generate waste products which tend progressively to pollute and poison the emotional and intellectual exchange processes and to render infertile any common community ground.
More fundamentally, through this mode the sustainable community must create a space for the natural expression of participants, giving pattern to their relationships as an ecosystem. It challenges belief in the possibility of any underlying homeostatic principles governing the global relationships amongst participants and their initiatives.
Role relationships:
  • Challenge: Responding to the constraint of personal development (Role 8) in endeavouring to manage the collective environment (Role 2).
  • Complementarities: Reconciling management of the collective environment (Role 2) with fostering new skills and abilities (Role 6) and developing more appropriate products (Role 10).
  • Systemic formal equivalents: Structural and mediatory responsibility also common to group management (Role 5), insight management (Role 11) and self- management (Role 8).

Role 3. "Ignorance / Mal-education" Metaphor
Contractually, this role calls for each participant to be sensitive to the inadequacies of his/her perspective and to compensate for the inadequacies of others in the sustainable community, whether or not these can be effectively brought to their attention.
We exhibit a greater degree of ignorance in a sustainable community when we assume the adequacy of the knowledge we demonstrate than when we question its validity from the perspectives of other participants.
In this mode each is complacent about his/her level of ignorance to the point of revelling in the adequacy of their comprehension of the dilemmas faced by the sustainable community or its participants and the appropriateness of the answers s/he can supply. This ignorance is further nourished by communications which pander to easy modes of understanding and do not attempt to challenge them. Education from such a perspective then tends to reinforce this sense of adequacy and ignores its own irrelevance to the real inter-sectoral challenges faced by the sustainable community.
More fundamentally, through this mode the sustainable community is faced with the challenge of what kinds of learning experiences within the sustainable community can meet the needs of participants with quite different knowledge bases. Especially challenging is the need to communicate a sense of historical perspective, notably when participants have lost any sense of relationship to historical roots or to the value of the collective wisdom of the past.
Role relationships:
  • Challenge: Responding to the constraint of impoverishment or exploitation (Role 9) in fostering the use of information (Role 3).
  • Complementarities: Reconciling fostering the use of information (Role 3) with protecting the vulnerable (Role 7) and with ensuring the emergence of new insights (Role 11).
  • Systemic formal equivalents: Fostering and promotional endeavours common to collective projects (Role 9), use of skills (Role 6), and the expression of cultural beliefs (Role 12).

Role 4. "Undernourishment / Malnutrition" Metaphor
Contractually, this role calls for each participant to be attentive to the forms of information and energy which are nourishing to others and their initiatives. Ways should also be sought to encourage others to supply forms of information which can ensure their survival in the sustainable community. It also raises dramatic questions concerning the conception (and "tabling") of issues during the event and the manner in which this should be curtailed, if at all.
Our contributions are less nourishing and enlivening to other participants when we assume that they are naturally fruitful than when we question their fruitfulness to others.
In this mode each experiences the limited nourishment offered by others to interests or projects that s/he seeks to further -- to the point at which people and/or projects suffer a form of emotional, intellectual or spiritual "starvation" during the sustainable community. But equally each intervention tends to contribute relatively little to the sustainable community in a form which is experienced as palatable and nourishing by others. As such each is both a cause of malnutrition in some and a victim of undernourishment from others. Few participants enjoy a healthy information diet throughout a sustainable community. These effects are often a consequence of the rapidly rising numbers of initiatives and perspectives clamouring for attention as the sustainable community progresses and creating an insatiable demand for project resources.
More fundamentally, it is through this mode that the sustainable community is faced with the question of who should be allowed to originate and present new issues and initiatives -- of what kind, in what quantity, and under what circumstances. The tendency of the sustainable community to be overrun by new issues, to which adequate attention cannot be given, then raises the question of whether and how such natural creativity should be curtailed -- especially when it may be perceived as either one of the principal joys of sustainable community or vital to the sense of security of the originator.
Role relationships:
  • Challenge: Responding to the constraint of product appropriateness (Role 10) in nourishing collective development (Role 4).
  • Complementarities: Reconciling nourishment of collective development (Role 4) with individual health and development (Role 8) and with expressing the relationship to cultural and spiritual insights (Role 12).
  • Systemic formal equivalents: Developmental and expansion orientation also common to procedural development (Role 7), initiative development (Role 1), and product development (Role 10).

Role 5. "Domination / Red tape / Mismanagement" Metaphor
Contractually, this role calls for each participant to act responsibly in developing the governance of the sustainable community, recognizing that regulations that may be satisfactory and logical to some could well be totally inhibiting to others. Any conflicts can be seen as challenges to collective learning.
We contribute more to the mismanagement of a sustainable community when we assume that our favoured procedures are the most useful to other participants than when we have doubts concerning their efficacy for others.
In this mode there is a tendency to subscribe to simplistic sustainable community structures and processes which do not have the capacity to deal with important latent conflicts or to move the sustainable community forwards in a fruitful way. As such failures become evident, in the face of new challenges within the sustainable community, these procedural devices are experienced by some as increasingly inadequate and artificial. They may also be judged as primarily serving the interests of the community establishment, and other vested interests, rather than the participants in general or the declared purpose of the event.
More fundamentally, it is through this mode that the ways in which power in the sustainable community is distributed and controlled can be understood, especially as they are used to mediate between opposing initiatives, to articulate new goals, and to ensure the implementation of acceptable new steps towards them. It is in this sense that concerns about a policy vacuum are expressed.
Role relationships:
  • Challenge: Responding to the constraint of allowing emergence of new insights (Role 11) in ensuring the management of the collective enterprise (Role 5).
  • Complementarities: Reconciling appropriate management (Role 5), with opportunities for significant initiatives (Role 1) with the dilemmas of exploitation (Role 9).
  • Systemic formal equivalents: Structural and mediatory responsibility also common to environmental management (Role 2), insight management (Role 11) and self- management (Role 8).

Role 6. "Underproductivity / Overproductivity" Metaphor
Contractually, this role calls for each participant to be sensitive to the levels of involvement of others in the sustainable community and to ensure that the attention is challenged so that each is effectively present there. Each should take some responsibility for questioning his/her own tendency to cultivate other agendas or to overstate a particular case.
We are less productive in a sustainable community when we assume we are responding productively to other contributions than when we have doubts concerning the contribution of our efforts to the productivity of other initiatives.
In this mode we may, at one extreme, respond minimalistically to the formal requirements of the sustainable community with little sense of engagement or involvement. Such "working to rule" can be so skilfully done that no criticism is justified. It may also manifest as various forms of "absenteeism", whether simple inattentiveness or actual involvement in alternative activities and agendas, possibly outside the sustainable community. At the other extreme we may each choose to exploit every opportunity to produce and develop a favourite argument or insight beyond the needs of the sustainable community or its capacity to benefit from it.
More fundamentally, it is through this mode that the productivity of the sustainable community as a whole is assessed. This may involve such primary activities as the "mining" of bodies of knowledge, the evocation and accumulation of various forms of psycho-social energy and commitment (notably as funds), or the cultivation of perspectives vital to the nourishment of the sustainable community. Aspects of the work may involve refining or processing the results of such activities for wider distribution amongst participants. The work of the sustainable community may be seen as directed to its social (re)construction, whether in the form of team building, the creation of fellowship and solidarity, or the design of specialized environments (commissions, workshops, etc). As such there may be concern about the quality and weaknesses of the sustainable community infrastructure and its associated services and facilities. From this perspective, the concern here is with the sustainable community as a habitat and with the sustainability of its development.
Role relationships:
  • Challenge: Responding to the constraint of expressing collective cultural insights (Role 12) in ensuring the fostering of new skills and abilities (Role 6).
  • Complementarities: Reconciling management of the collective environment (Role 2) with fostering new skills and abilities (Role 6) and developing more appropriate products (Role 10).
  • Systemic formal equivalents: Fostering and promotional endeavours common to collective projects (Role 9), use of information (Role 3), and the expression of cultural beliefs (Role 12).

Role 7. "Injustice / Criminality / Injured innocence" Metaphor
Contractually, this role calls for each participant to be vigilantly attentive to the tendency of others to take unfair advantage of situations in the sustainable community, whilst at the same time recognizing that others must necessarily impose similar constraints on his/her propensities.
We are more threatening to other participants when we assume that our role is not experienced as intimidating and discriminating by some than when we question how others may be threatened by our actions in the sustainable community.
In this mode each may at one extreme rejoice in an air of innocence, whether sincere or deliberately assumed, concerning the fairness with s/he responds to others. Such innocence then defines anything offensive or discriminatory as being the responsibility of others at the gathering. At the other extreme, the role exploits opportunities in the sustainable community for action in an underhanded or unfair manner, often behind the scenes and possibly with accomplices. Such initiatives may well be unconscious. They are often undertaken at the expense of vulnerable groups represented at the sustainable community, whether minorities of one kind or another, or those subjected to some special handicap. Part of the challenge is that any such "success" may be valued as a mark of superior sustainable community gamesmanship. The only constraint may be seen in the shame or guilt of being "caught" and subject to formal censure. The consequences for the victims of such practices are considered incidental.
More fundamentally, through this mode the sustainable community is faced with the challenge of insecurity and fear engendered amongst participants and its destructive effects on the sustainable community as a community. It raises the question of the pattern of rights and responsibilities amongst participants and how it is to be protected.
Role relationships:
  • Challenge: Responding to the need for risky significant initiatives (Role 1) in endeavouring to protect the vulnerable (Role 7).
  • Complementarities: Reconciling fostering the use of information (Role 3) with protecting the vulnerable (Role 7) and with ensuring the mergence of new insights (Role 11).
  • Systemic formal equivalents: Developmental and expansion orientation also common to product development (Role 10), initiative development (Role 1), and population development (Role 4).

Role 8. "Illness / Malformation / Therapy" Metaphor
Contractually, this role calls for each participant to be sensitive to the unwelcome challenges s/he brings to the emotional, mental or spiritual hygiene of the sustainable community. Each should be prepared to act in a supportive/therapeutic role to others, whether they are in distress or causing it. But enthusiasm for any therapeutic role or fashion should be conditioned by recognition of the difficulties of challenging its use as a panacea.
We bring more malaise to a sustainable community when we assume that we are paragons of well-being than when we have doubts concerning our degree of health in the eyes of others.
In this mode we each exhibit unhealthy behaviours and attitudes which, due to their infectious or contagious nature, may directly threaten the behavioral health of other participants. As disabilities or malformations, such behaviours may also call for some form of therapeutic intervention, including use of prosthetic devices, to enable us to interact on an equal basis with others. The therapeutic measures evoked, and any need for constraint or quarantine, can seriously inconvenience the flow of the sustainable community. Such unhealthy psychological conditions make it difficult for innovative initiatives emerging within the sustainable community to survive into maturity through their period of dependency.
More fundamentally, it is through this mode that we distinguish those processes which enhance our sense of well-being as a participant as opposed to those that contribute to unproductive forms of stress. Both raise questions concerning our understanding of the nature and direction of our personal development.
Role relationships:
  • Challenge: Responding to the constraint of the health of the collective environment (Role 2) in endeavouring to ensure individual health and development (Role 8).
  • Complementarities: Reconciling nourishment of collective development (Role 4) with individual health and development (Role 8) and with expressing the relationship to cultural and spiritual insights (Role 12).
  • Systemic formal equivalents: Structural and mediatory responsibility also common to environmental management (Role 2), insight management (Role 11) and group management (Role 5).

Role 9. "Impoverishment / Exploitation / Wealth maldistribution" Metaphor
Contractually, this role calls for each participant to explore the kinds of wealth produced and distributed during any sustainable community and the ways in which such processes can be made more equitable. Although a rich experience for one may be judged as unfruitful by another seeking different benefits, the "gap" between the "rich" and the "poor" should be a matter of continuing concern.
We are more exploitative in a sustainable community when we assume that our initiatives do not impoverish the experience of other participants than when we question this possibility.
In this mode we find ourselves, on the one hand, impoverished by the quality of the sustainable community dynamics to which we are effectively exposed. We experience ourselves as exploited by others more skilled in manipulating sustainable community processes in which we would like to participate more fully in order to benefit to the extent that they do. On the other hand, when the situation presents itself, we use our skills to exploit others, however much it impoverishes their experience of the gathering, in order to profit more fully from the event ourselves.
More fundamentally, it is through this mode that what is valuable to the sustainable community is defined and the manner of its distribution within the sustainable community is controlled. This can readily lead to manipulative transactions between groups of participants that amount to "profiteering", "rip-offs" or "dumping". Some groups may build up debts to others, conditioning their behaviour and creating long-term dependency. The pattern of who owes what to whom becomes a major determinant of sustainable community dynamics, making it difficult to undertake new initiatives freed from such burdens of past debts and obligations. Groups of participants can be plagued by inflationary conditions in which too much energy and enthusiasm is chasing too few concrete initiatives.
Role relationships:
  • Challenge: Responding to the constraint of fostering the dissemination of information (Role 3) in exploiting the advantages that it offers (Role 9).
  • Complementarities: Reconciling appropriate management (Role 5), with opportunities for significant initiatives (Role 1) and with the dilemmas of exploitation (Role 9).
  • Systemic formal equivalents: Fostering and promotional endeavours common to use of skills (Role 6), use of information (Role 3), and the expression of cultural beliefs (Role 12).

Role 10. "Shoddy workmanship / Overskill / Overdesign" Metaphor
Contractually, this role calls for each participant to be sensitive to the quality and reliability of the contributions made, avoiding specious arguments, ploys and appeals, and discouraging their production by others in the sustainable community. But care should also be taken to avoid sophisticated arguments which disempower others and reduce their ability to participate. In either case, all participants are required to perform a maintenance function in response to defects in the contributions of others.
We make more inappropriate contributions to a sustainable community when we assume that they are naturally appropriate than when we have doubts concerning their degree of appropriateness to other participants.
In this mode we each contribute inappropriately to the sustainable community. At one extreme, this may take the form of ill-conceived or ill-crafted interventions that are far from being the best of which we are capable. Such "unreliable" interventions force others present into a "maintenance" mode, to the point of devoting excessive resources to compensate for such inadequacies. At the other extreme, this may take the form of highly skilled interventions which others are unable to match and which are beyond the real needs of the moment. This has the insidious effect of creating dependency on the supply of such "overdesigned" contributions and the peak experiences that they seem to offer. It devalues simpler contributions which may well be more appropriate to the evolution of the sustainable community.
More fundamentally, it is through this mode that the issues of the appropriateness of the psycho-social sciences used in the sustainable community are assessed, together with any supportive communication technologies. Both raise questions concerning the degree of responsibility with which insights and know-how are developed, brought to bear, and transferred amongst participants in the sustainable community environment.
Role relationships:
  • Challenge: Responding to the constraint of nourishing the collective development (Role 4) in endeavouring to develop more appropriate products (Role 10).
  • Complementarities: Reconciling management of the collective environment (Role 2) with fostering new skills and abilities (Role 6) and developing more appropriate products (Role 10).
  • Systemic formal equivalents: Developmental and expansion orientation also common to procedural development (Role 7), initiative development (Role 1), and population development (Role 4).

Role 11. "Misrepresentation and Disinformation" Metaphor
Contractually, this role calls for each participant to recognize the limitations of language and philosophies in honouring the complex richness of the realities experienced by those at a representative sustainable community. Each needs to recognize that failure to understand how s/he is part of the communication problem guarantees failure in understanding the nature of any response that might be appropriate.
The representation of reality that we endeavour to communicate to other participants is experienced as more incoherent when we assume that it offers unique integrative advantages than when we question whether this may be the case for others.
In this mode each seeks to cultivate a particular representation of the reality of the sustainable community and the world of issues of which it is an articulation. Whether deliberately or inadvertently, the selective presentation of information can be used to give substance to certain issues and to deny it to others. In this way each effectively denies aspects of reality favoured by others at the sustainable community, emphasizing other aspects in ways which some will judge to be exaggerated and even dangerously distorted, however seductive they appear to others.
More fundamentally, through this mode enthusiasm is expressed in the sustainable community for particular philosophies, ideologies and belief systems. This is matched by efforts to reconcile them and, through them, the vested interests with which they are associated. This presents a dilemma between partial perspectives of greater relevance to some as contrasted with more integrative perspectives which cannot be effectively grounded or widely comprehended.
Role relationships:
  • Challenge: Responding to the constraint of managing the collective enterprise (Role 5) in ensuring the emergence of new insights (Role 11).
  • Complementarities: Reconciling fostering the use of information (Role 3) with protecting the vulnerable (Role 7) and with ensuring the emergence of new insights (Role 11).
  • Systemic formal equivalents: Structural and mediatory responsibility also common to environmental management (Role 2), self- management (Role 8) and group management (Role 5).

Role 12. "Tokenism / Hedonism / Ritualism" Metaphor
Contractually, this role calls for each participant to manage the tension between the "public relations" challenge of the moment and the deeper work of the sustainable community with its implications for the longer-term. It calls for each to be sensitive to the aesthetic or spiritual sins, whether of commission or omission, that may accompany the resolution of this tension.
We are more effective in turning cultural and religious celebrations into meaningless rituals when we assume that they are not experienced as such by some than when we question why this may indeed be the case.
In this mode the unique, celebratory opportunity offered by the event is recognized as a vehicle for the spirit of the moment that may be important as a symbol within wider society. This may take the form of special rituals, declarations or appeals, which constantly run the danger of being experienced or judged as tokenism. It may also offer much welcomed opportunities for social and personal exchanges. These may however be sought for their own sake as recreation and judged by some as a hedonistic betrayal of the purpose of the sustainable community.
More fundamentally, it is through this mode that the sustainable community draws upon its cultural, symbolic and spiritual resources to clarify and affirm the meanings and values that are the justification for more tangible initiatives. Both culture and religion may encode insights into potential relationships which the intellect has as yet been unable to articulate in a comprehensible manner. It is in this sense that concerns about a spiritual or religious vacuum are expressed.
Role relationships:
  • Challenge: Responding to the constraint of fostering new skills and abilities (Role 6) in ensuring the expressing of cultural and spiritual insights (Role 12).
  • Complementarities: Reconciling nourishment of collective development (Role 4) with individual health and development (Role 8) and with expressing the relationship to cultural and spiritual insights (Role 12).
  • Systemic formal equivalents: Fostering and promotional endeavours common to collective projects (Role 9), use of skills (Role 6), and the use of information (Role 3).

Example: Sustainable Community Participant Commitment Form

As a participant in the sustainable communityentitled:

I hereby accept my contractual obligations to other participants as indicated above. In the same spirit, I equally accept the necessity for my actions as a participant to be both facilitated and constrained by their responses to me.
I further accept that collectively we will endeavour to achieve a deeper understanding of the pattern of challenges and opportunities suggested by the dynamics of major social problems as they resonate within the community -- with the intention of achieving higher orders of consensus that should empower us to respond more effectively to the root causes of such problems.
Name:

Date:
Signature:
Document to be returned to the community organizers.

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