Thought some of you might be interested in the National Coalition for Dialogue 
and Deliberation.  Here's something about what they're doing.

Peggy

----- Original Message ----- 
From: Sandy Heierbacher 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Thursday, February 26, 2004 7:19 AM
Subject: welcome new members & enlisting your help


Hello, Peggy!  In this important members' announcement, I'd like to do two 
things:

 

1.  Welcome and introduce NCDD's 25 newest members.

2.  Encourage each of you to PLEASE share with your networks the latest news 
about NCDD - about the 2004 conference, the website and its new features, and 
the Let's Talk America project.

 

So first of all, I am happy to welcome into the NCDD community 9 new 
organizational members and 16 new individual members.  Ten of our new members 
hail from California; two each from Alaska, Illinois, Maryland, Oregon and 
Washington DC; and one each from Vermont, Wisconsin, Minnesota, West Virginia 
and even India!

 

The new NCDD members are:

 

Newest Organizational Members

- coAction (Lauren Parker Kucera, Director; Alejandro Vilchez, second contact)

- Green Mountain Institute (Chris Paterson, Director of Civic Innovation)

- Gregoire & Associates (Rogier Gregoire, Ed.D., President)

- Information Renaissance (Rosemary Gunn, National Projects Director; Robert 
Carlitz, Executive Director)

- Mendocino Coast Peace & Justice Center (Myra Beals)

- The Public Dialogue Consortium (Barnett Pearce, President; Kim Pearce, 
Founding Member)

- Simple Idea (Richard Burg, Principal)

- Sophia Associates, LLC (Alicia M. Rodriguez, M.A., P.C.C.)

- University of Maryland, Office of Human Relations Programs (Sivagami 
Subbaraman, Coordinator of Multicultural Educational Technology)

                                                          

Newest Individual Members

- Sarah Barton of RISE Alaska

- Sarah Bier, a student at the University of Illinois

- David Boyd, AICP of MSA Professional Services, Inc. (formerly of Focus St. 
Louis)

- Patricia Danielson of Thursday's Rose

- Jim Durkin, Ph.D. of Collaboration Laboratories

- Sadeque Hussain of Conflict Relief and Peace Organization in India

- Jonathan Hutson, Communications Director of Trial Lawyers for Public Justice

- Janell Jures

- Patriciafaye Marshall

- Kenoli Oleari of Horizons of Change

- Nancy Peden of Lived Learning

- Julie Pratt

- Don Roberts, Jr.

- Najeeba Syeed-Miller, J.D., Director of Intercultural Conflict Resolution 
Systems

- W. Marc Tognotti of the San Francisco Neighborhood Assemblies Network 
initiative

- Howard Ward

 

I encourage all of the new members to introduce yourselves to the rest of us 
via the NCDD Discussion List.

 

 

Secondly, I'd like to ask all of you to please share one of the following two 
announcements with your networks - or to create your own.

 

As you know, this is a very exciting time for NCDD.  We just launched our new 
website and a number of great new features (including several interactive 
features).  We also just announced the date and venue of the second National 
Conference on Dialogue & Deliberation - which over 100 people emailed me about 
last week alone!  And we are working on an exciting nationwide dialogue program 
in partnership with Utne Magazine, Conversation Café, The World Café and the 
Democracy in America Convention.  We could really use your help getting the 
word out there about all of these things.

 

What follows are two very different announcements about these projects and 
resources.  The first is the just-the-basics message I emailed out to our list 
of 6,000 D&D leaders last week.  The second, written by my friend Tom Atlee, is 
much longer but much more interesting and powerful.  Tom created a kind of web 
guide to the new NCDD site, in addition to announcing the conference and LTA 
initiative.  Tom is able to say things about NCDD that I could never say about 
my own work, and his writing is simply inspiring.  If you can use this longer 
announcement, I think it may be the more effective one.

 

 

- Sandy's announcement -

 

News from the National Coalition for Dialogue & Deliberation

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 
- - - - - 

 

NCDD has three announcements they'd like to share with you.

 

1. The 2004 National Conference on Dialogue & Deliberation

NCDD just announced the date and venue for the SECOND National Conference on 
Dialogue & Deliberation.  NCDD's 2004 conference will take place in Denver, 
Colorado, October 23 through 25 at Regis University.

 

NCDD plans to have this conference surpass the groundbreaking 2002 conference 
in every way - in numbers, in quality, in networking opportunities, in learning 
and skill-building.  So please save the date and let them know (at 
www.thataway.org/conference/2004/index.html) if you'd like to join the 
conference organizing team, co-sponsor the event, present a session or become 
involved in any other way!

 

2. New NCDD Website

Secondly, NCDD's new website is up (still at www.thataway.org), and it is 
packed with invaluable resources and new interactive elements.  A few of the 
new features are:

 

- Our Community Happenings Blog -

The Happenings blog replaces the Dialogue to Action Initiative's "Community 
Section" (the news & calendar for the D&D community).  This weblog makes it 
easier for NCDD to post your news, resources, events and opportunities - while 
making it easier for you to find the stuff you care about.  With the blog, you 
can look up events, opportunities and news by type of D&D practice, type of 
resource, region, date, and more.

 

- Resources for Addressing Current Issues -

Finally - a way for D&D organizers and community leaders to easily locate the 
best resources available for fostering community discussion and action on 
specific current issues. 14 issues are already up, including Police-Community 
Relations, Intergroup Relations, Education Reform, and much more.

 

- Models & Techniques -

Detailed descriptions of leading D&D models, the networks that use them, the 
organizations that promote them and the circumstances they're most suited for.

 

3. Let's Talk America

We've all been hearing about how our nation is more deeply divided than ever - 
about how we feel about the President, about the war, about gay marriage. about 
just about everything. NCDD has been working closely with Utne Magazine, 
Conversation Cafés, The World Café and now the Democracy in America Convention 
to spark nation-wide dialogue about the future of our democracy that will move 
us beyond the polarization of left and right.

 

NCDD invites you to join them in this important work. With your help, this 
groundbreaking initiative could engage millions of people in a dialogue on 
democracy during this election year. Go to www.letstalkamerica.org if you'd 
like to learn more about how you and your organization can get involved (by 
convening, facilitating, endorsing, participating, etc.). We'd like Let's Talk 
America to begin truly mobilizing the power of the dialogue & deliberation 
community.

 

For more information about NCDD, go to www.thataway.org or email Sandy 
Heierbacher, NCDD's Convenor, at [email protected].

 

 

 

- Tom Atlee's announcement -

 

News from the National Coalition for Dialogue & Deliberation

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 
- - - - - 

 

This email announces the National Conference on Dialogue and Deliberation in 
October and, more importantly, provides an introduction and guide to the 
amazing National Coalition for Dialogue and Deliberation website, a precious 
bookmark for anyone interested in dialogue or deliberation. You may want to 
keep the NCDD website guide as a reference, or send it to friends.

--

 

Dear friends,

 

If you are involved with dialogue or deliberation in any way as an activist, 
scholar, practitioner or otherwise -- and if you believe that dialogue and 
deliberation have important roles to play in the world -- then this email 
contains vital information for you.

 

First of all, take out your calendar.  Mark October 23-25, 2004 as your time to 
go to The 2004 National Conference on Dialogue & Deliberation in Denver, 
Colorado.  This is being planned, say the organizers, to "surpass the 
groundbreaking 2002 conference in every way - in numbers, in quality, in 
networking opportunities, in learning and skill-building."

 

Now I have to tell you that the 2002 NCDD conference was the most amazing 
conference I've ever attended.  You can read details about it at 
www.thataway.org/conference/index.html. Of course, if dialogue and deliberation 
are not topics that interest you, you might have found it as ho-hum as a 
conference on 16th Century Icelandic architecture.  But I and a couple of 
hundred other people who love this subject were really impressed.  
Significantly, I only knew 7 of the 240 attendees at the start -- and I'd been 
in this field for a decade.  This is a big diverse field, bubbling with 
vitality.  And NCDD is bringing it all together.

 

So please save the date.  And if you'd like to be on the conference organizing 
team (NCDD is very inclusive and collegial in its organizing style) or if you'd 
like to co-sponsor the event or present a session, or get involved in some 
other way -- let them know using the form at 
www.thataway.org/conference/2004/interest.html.

 

And now I want to introduce you to the amazing new NCDD Website.

 

 

* * * *   The New NCDD Website  * * * * *

 

NCDD's new website -- still at <www.thataway.org/>thataway.org -- is packed 
with invaluable resources, new interactive elements, a great new look and 
easier navigation. Here are a few of the new features:

 

 

- The Community Happenings Blog <www.thataway.org/news/index.html> -

 

The Happenings blog replaces the previous Dialogue to Action Initiative's 
"Community Section" (the news and calendar pages).  This weblog makes it easy 
for NCDD to post news, resources, events and opportunities sent in by members - 
while making it easier for everyone to find the information they care about.  
You just look up events, opportunities and news by the type of dialogue and 
deliberation practice, type of resource, region, date, and so on.

 

 

- Resources for Addressing Current Issues 
<www.thataway.org/resources/practice/issues/issues.html> -

 

Here's a way -- at last -- for dialogue and deliberation organizers, community 
leaders and ordinary citizens to easily locate the best resources available for 
fostering community discussion and action on specific current issues. 14 issues 
are already up, including Police-Community Relations, Intergroup Relations, 
Education Reform, Government and Politics, Economic Growth, Development and the 
Environment, Health Care, Iraq, the Middle East, Violence, Youth.....

 

 

- Models & Techniques 
<www.thataway.org/resources/understand/models/models.html> -

 

Here you'll find detailed descriptions of leading dialogue and deliberation 
models, the networks that use them, the organizations that promote them and the 
circumstances they're most suited for.  This informative compilation includes 
Appreciative Inquiry, Citizen Juries, Compassionate Listening, Conversation 
Café, Deliberative Polling, National Issues Forums, Nonviolent Communication, 
Open Space Technology, Public Conversations Project, Socrates Café, Study 
Circles, Sustained Dialogue, Web Lab's Small Group Dialogue, Wisdom Council and 
World Cafe, 

 

 

- High-Tech Tools Used in D&D Programs 
<www.thataway.org/resources/practice/hightech/intro.html> -

 

Here you'll find a fine introduction and overview of this often complex field 
followed by LOTS of simple descriptions of some of the best high-tech tools, 
products and programs used to enhance both online and face-to-face dialogue and 
deliberation programs, collaborations, discussion mapping, polling, public 
participation and online community-building.  A great feature here is a helpful 
glossary of technical terms (linked to every page) to help people at all levels 
of technological savvy grasp these remarkable tools.

 

 

And that's not all.  Even the traditional features that have made me so excited 
about the NCDD site for so long have been beefed up and given a new look and 
accessibility.  These include:

 

www.thataway.org/resources/understand/what.html

Definitions of dialogue and deliberation from many sources (including yours 
truly).

 

www.thataway.org/resources/understand/index.html

Fabulous Resource Guide Number One - loaded with great quotes and tools, a 
mouth-watering (mind-blossoming?) annotated bibliography, and a fascinating 
glossary of dialogue and deliberation words and phrases from every corner of 
the field (including this one).

 

www.thataway.org/resources/practice/index.html

Fabulous Resource Guide Number Two - Here are lists of how-to manuals and 
guidebooks, videos, e-resources and even TEN complete sets of dialogue and 
deliberation ground rules to choose from, mix-and-match or just get inspired by.

 

www.thataway.org/resources/explore/index.html

Fabulous Resource Guide Number Three - Here's the learning corner where you'll 
find dozens of dialogue and deliberation organizations described, as well as 
training opportunities, educational programs, and truckloads of research 
materials and websites -- all nicely annotated. Here, especially, you see the 
wide sweep and amazing diversity of this field.

 

www.thataway.org/projects/index.html

Here you can read about the many exciting projects underway in and around NCDD 
-- from peace and democracy initiatives, to articulating visionary missions 
(not only for NCDD, but for the whole field of dialogue and deliberation), to 
media initiatives and mutual support and learning networks -- national, global, 
local... the list goes on and on.... And if you want to talk with colleagues, 
get advice, or just stay in touch with what's happening, there are a number of 
different listservs and online discussions and collaborations listed at 
www.thataway.org/discussions/index.html (one of which, the NCDD Wiki, has 
gotten me more excited than anything I've seen in years, but I'll talk about 
that later...).  In other words, if you want to get involved, there's no 
shortage of activities here!

 

And of course the site tells you how to contact and join NCDD -- see 
www.thataway.org/join/index.html -- which I hope hundreds of you do this year 
because this is going to be one remarkable year... a watershed year... a time 
for us to weave our diverse gifts together into a culture of dialogue capable 
of bringing forth a civilization that works for all, learning and changing 
wisely as our world grows toward the Seventh Generation after us....

 

NCDD exists to help the pioneers of this journey -- including you -- find 
greater power, wisdom, common ground, and vision together.  Welcome aboard.

 

Coheartedly,

Tom

 

Tom Atlee

The Co-Intelligence Institute

www.co-intelligence.org

 

 

 

Thanks, everyone.  I do hope many of you can help get the word out about our 
projects and resources!

 

Sandy

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