The emergence of regional political institutions will be key to disruption of 
American politics (currently scheduled for 2020 :-).

http://www.caeconomy.org/reporting/entry/the-power-inversion-regions-take-center-stage

The Power Inversion: Regions take Center Stage

Reporting RSS

July 02, 2013 by Doug Henton



When David Brooks writes about The Power Inversion, you know that the 
importance of regions has finally entered the zeitgeist.

Since the New Deal, we have become accustomed to seeing American politics as an 
ever-concentrated national enterprise. But the sclerosis of the federal system 
will inevitably produce a reversal, as regions fill the void.

While the immediate impetus for his column was the new book The Metropolitan 
Revolution, by Bruce Katz and Jennifer Bradley of the Brookings Institution who 
argue that as federal government becomes less energetic, metropolitan 
city-states become more so, the idea that regions are now taking center stage 
as a result of a power shift has been gaining momentum for many years.   

Since the early 1990s, Neal Peirce and his Citistates Group has been 
chronicling these developments with the publication of the book Citistates: How 
Urban America Can Prosper in a Competitive World in and now through the weekly 
Citiwire. Over a decade ago, the Alliance for Regional Stewardship created a 
regional learning network to share best practices focused on the critical role 
of civic leadership. As stated by the late John W. Gardner in the initial 
monograph of the Alliance for Regional Stewardship in 2000: 

Regional stewards are rising to the challenge. But what do regional stewards 
look like? They have first of all a deep sense of responsibility about their 
region. They want it to thrive economically, to be sustainable environmentally, 
and to have the web of mutual obligations, caring, trust and shared values that 
make possible the accomplishment of group purpose.

They recognize that most of our communities are seriously fragmented, and they 
are committed to bringing the fragments together, committed to fostering the 
shared understanding and priorities that will permit community solidarity in 
pursuit of goals. Regional stewards will draw young potential leaders into the 
fray. They will make sure that leaders in their region come to know and 
understand different sectors so that true community deliberation can take 
place.  

Regionalism will continue to gain ground, but its progress will be greatly 
strengthened if we cultivate our potential regional stewards. 

Based on our experience in over 30 regions, Collaborative Economics has written 
two books on the central importance of regional steward leadership: Grassroots 
Leaders for a New Economy: How Civic Entrepreneurs are Building Prosperity 
Communities (1997) and Civic Revolutionaries: Creating the Passion for Change 
in America’s Communities (2003).

Now when David Brooks and Brookings recognize the national importance of these 
trends emerging from the bottom up, we know that its time has finally arrived. 
As Bruce Katz and Jennifer Bradley point out: 

The promise of the metropolitan revolution, of course, is not just to catalyze 
problem solving across metropolitan areas or even to unlock market innovations, 
as critical as those advances are. It is to repair what ails the United States, 
a political system mired in ruinous partisanship and ideological division. It 
is a short, logical step from collaborating locally on affirmative, pragmatic 
solutions to advocating at the state and federal level for systemic and 
structural policy reform. Collaborative action on ground level leads naturally 
to collective advocacy at the federal and state levels. (Page 205)

One current example of how regions are coming together to collaborate to 
address challenges at the state level is the California Economic Summit,  where 
16 regions are engaging over 1,700 business, government, labor and 
environmental stewards in identifying and advancing common strategies focused 
on workforce, infrastructure, regulations, capital and innovation. This 
bottoms-up approach is modeling a new governance approach where regions work 
together to shape state level policies building on the work of the California 
Stewardship Network, an alliance of regional partnerships and California 
Forward,  a nonpartisan, statewide group promoting governance reforms.

Underneath this power inversion are much deeper trends. A recent forum led 
byTom Friedman in San Francisco brought together some leading thinkers on how 
power is shifting downward.  Friedman likes to quote Curt Carlson of SRI 
International who says “everything that is top down is dumb and slow; 
everything from bottoms up is smart and chaotic.” Friedman asks, while we have 
more “amplified individuals”, who leads in this new bottoms-up world?

At his San Francisco forum, Friedman invited two leading thinkers who addressed 
the issue of the downsizing of power. Moisés Naím, former editor of Foreign 
Policy author of The End of Power asserts: 

Power is spreading, and long-established, big players are increasingly being 
challenged by newer and smaller ones. And those who have power are more 
constrained in how they can use it. …

Power is undergoing a fundamental mutation that has not been sufficiently 
recognized and understood. Even as rival states, companies, political parties, 
social movements and institutions or individual leaders fight for power as they 
have done throughout the ages,  power itself – what they are fighting so 
desperately to get and keep – is slipping away. 

Power is decaying. (Page 1)

He argues that restoring trust, finding new ways for citizens to meaningfully 
participate in the political process, creating new mechanisms for effective 
governance and enhancing the capacity to work together should be the central 
goal of our time. (Page 243)

We are on the verge of a revolutionary wave of positive political and 
institutional innovations. … It will not be top-down, orderly, or quick … Yet 
it is inevitable. Driven by transformation in acquisition, use and retention of 
power, humanity must, and will, find new ways of governing itself. (Pages 
243-4) 

At the Friedman Forum, Marian Gorbis of the Institute of the Future in her 
bookThe Nature of the Future agreed that power is shifting downward but saw 
information technology as a driving force.  

Large corporations, big governments, and other centralized organizations have 
long determined and dominated the way we work, access healthcare, get an 
education, feed ourselves, and generally go about our lives. … Today, this 
organizational advantage is rapidly disappearing. The Internet is lowering 
transactions costs—costs of connection, coordination and trade—and pointing to 
a future that increasingly favors distributed sources and social solutions to 
some of our most immediate needs and our most intractable problems. (Book 
jacket, The Nature of the Future) 

She sees a new kind of social economy emerging where the need for institutional 
structures to create value and achieve scale are evaporating and being replaced 
by a new level of collective intelligence embedded in social connections with 
multitudes of others. Instead of taking the personal and social out of 
transactions, she believes that we can use our technology-enabled connectivity 
to achieve scale in new ways. (Page 39) She too believe this will lead to new 
forms of governance based on citizen participation and networked collaboration. 
(Page 115) 

It is worth remembering that the futurist Alvin Toffler saw these trends on the 
horizon over two decades ago in his 1990 book PowerShift – the second volume of 
his trilogy that opened with Future Shock and continued with the Third Wave: 

…We live at the moment when the entire structure of power that held the world 
together is now disintegrating. And this is happening at every level of human 
society.

In the office, the supermarket, at the bank, in the executive suite, in our 
churches, hospitals, schools, and homes, old patterns of power are fracturing 
along strange new lines. This crackup of old-style authority and power in 
business and daily life is accelerating at the very moment when global power 
structures are disintegrating as well. 

The forces now shaking power at every level of the human system will become 
more intense and pervasive in the years immediately ahead. Out of this massive 
restructuring… will come one of the rarest events in human history:  a 
revolution in the very nature of power. 

A “powershift” does not merely transfer power. It transforms it. (Page i)

Once again, Toffler was ahead of the curve in recognizing the importance of 
networks in providing a new way to organize in this changing environment. 

Informal networks of many kinds crop up in virtually all complex societies. … 
For a long time the role and structure of such networks were ignored by 
economists and business theorists. … These networks, formal or not, share 
common characteristics. They tend to be horizontal rather than vertical – 
meaning they have either a flat hierarchy or none at all. They are 
adaptive—able to reconfigure themselves quickly to meet changing conditions. 
Leadership in them tends to be based on competence and personality rather than 
on social or organizational rank. And power turns over frequently and more 
easily than in a bureaucracy, changing hands as new situations arise that 
demand new skills.(Pages 196-7)

Which returns us to the core reason why regional networks and civic leadership 
within these networks have become so central in this era of power inversion.    
 

As the famous sociologist Daniel Bell once said, 

The nation-state has become too small for the big problems of life and too big 
for the small problems.

As we face increasing gridlock at the national level and experience the long 
term, downward powershift, we must now turn to regions for innovative solutions 
to our most pressing challenges. At the core of the most effective regions we 
are likely to find “innovation brokers” who act as the critical intermediaries 
in the innovation economy who take regional assets like universities, local 
industry, and sources of capital and connect them in order to create new 
businesses, jobs, and wealth. We have been identifying this trend for some 
time.     

So there you have it; regions are finally being officially recognized for 
taking center stage. Let’s get on with creating the regional networks that 
civic leaders need to succeed in this more decentralized, innovation economy. 

Categories: Regional Forums



-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.


Reply via email to