Hi Allison,

My colleagues and I just finished a paper overviewing the literature on 
complexity and community health and conducting our own test of the utility of 
this approach by studying how residential mobility impacts community-level 
health.  I am trained in clinical psych and medical sociology.  You may find it 
useful.  Here is the link to the PDF published through our Center for 
Complexity in Health proceedings:
http://cch.ashtabula.kent.edu/publications/PCCH_communities%20complex%20systems%20test.pdf

We also used, amongst a host of other methods, a basic program in Netlogo, 
which is something you might also find helpful, as it does not require 
extensive programming skill and it is free
http://ccl.northwestern.edu/netlogo/

I would also look through recent articles at the Journal of Artificial 
Societies and Social Simulation:
http://jasss.soc.surrey.ac.uk/JASSS.html


Regards,

Brian
----------------------------------------------
[cid:[email protected]]

Brian Castellani, Ph.D.
Professor of Sociology
Kent State University, Kent Ohio, USA

Adjunct Prof of Psychiatry
Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine and Pharmacology
Rootstown, Ohio, USA

Director, Center for Complexity in Health
Robert S. Morris Health and Science Building
Kent State University at Ashtabula

Advisory Board Member
Center for Complex Systems Studies
Kalamazoo College, Kalamazoo, MI, USA

[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
440-964-4331
website: 
www.personal.kent.edu/~bcastel3/<http://www.personal.kent.edu/~bcastel3/>

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Allison Pinto
Sent: Sunday, May 06, 2012 5:15 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [FRIAM] modeling child/neighborhood well-being and gentrification

Hello FRIAMers,

Allison Pinto of Sarasota, Florida here -- I met some of you five years or so 
ago, while I was working at the Florida Mental Health Institute and immersing 
myself in all things complexity.  I am a child/community psychologist now 
living in Sarasota, Florida, which is on the west coast of Florida about an 
hour south of Tampa.

Over the past three years, I have been devoting my combined personal / 
professional efforts to figuring out what it takes for child / neighborhood / 
community well-being to emerge optimally, from a child psychology / asset-based 
community development / complexity perspective -- specifically, here in my home 
neighborhood of Central-Cocoanut in Sarasota.  I am wondering if some of you 
who are fellow complexity enthusiasts might be interested in helping our 
neighborhood to model what is happening here.

Our neighborhood is .4 square miles -- 16 streets long by 3 street wide.  It is 
47 blocks and about 2000 people, of whom about 500 are up to age 18, 300 are up 
to age 10 and 175 are up to age 5.  That is a high proportion of kids for 
Sarasota County, the demographically oldest large county in the United States.  
It is also a neighborhood that is historically and predominantly Black / 
African-American, although the proportion of residents who identify as White 
has increased from 25% to about 40% over the past decade, and the proportion 
who identify as Latino / Hispanic has increased from 5% to 15%.  (The county as 
a whole is 86% White, 5% Black and 7% Latino/Hispanic.)  It is a neighborhood 
with a high proportion of residents experiencing poverty, too -- in a county 
that is one of the wealthiest in the state of Florida.

There are two phenomena that would be great to get some help modeling, from a 
complexity perspective.  The first is general child/neighborhood well-being.  
(Understood as the same phenomenon at different scales.)  I'm interested in 
figuring out how to model well-being at the neighborhood scale with kids and 
fellow neighbors as primary agents, connected through the "just in time" 
exchange of relevant info and also a process of "attuned responsivity" that 
makes it possible to co-organize thoughts/feelings/behaviors/physiology, in an 
environment that is characterized by tangible everyday evidence of nurturance 
(social and otherwise).

The other phenomenon is one our neighborhood is very much dealing with now:  
the emergence of gentrification.  This is currently happening here in 
mean-spirited and painful ways.  Artists and arts patrons from outside the 
neighborhood, together with the local media, have functionally turned the 
neighborhood into a stage for a Jerry-Springer-like "community dialogue," at 
neighbors' expense.  The dynamic that seems to be emerging is one in which 
artists and arts patrons (who in this community are predominantly White and 
predominantly of mid- to high-income) are "against" residents (who in this 
neighborhood are predominantly Black, with many also of low-income).  (You can 
read some about this 
here<http://www.heraldtribune.com/article/20120202/ARTICLE/120209889>, 
here<http://www.thebradentontimes.com/news/2012/04/18/opinion/artistic_censorship_denies_opportunity_for_dialog_and_growth/>,
 here<http://www.heraldtribune.com/article/20120502/COLUMNIST/305029996> and 
here<http://www.heraldtribune.com/article/20120503/ARTICLE/120509862>.)  I am 
most concerned about the negative effects this is likely to have on 
neighborkids here.  I am interested in working together with fellow neighbors 
to disrupt this dynamic before it becomes any further entrenched, and believe 
that complexity-informed modeling could be a helpful resource to us as 
neighbors.

The thing is - despite promising to teach myself NetLogo for the past five 
years (it is still blocked out each morning in my Outlook !), I haven't yet 
done so, and don't know of any fellow Central-Cocoanut neighbors who are adept 
when it comes to the modeling of complex systems.  So I am wondering if some of 
you would be interested in working together on this.

Please email if this is something you could get into.

Thanks,

Allison

Allison Pinto, Ph.D.
Banyan Sprout, Inc.
1226 N. Tamiami Trail
Suite 202-6
Sarasota, FL 34236
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
www.banyansprout.com<http://www.banyansprout.com>











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