Fascinating. I'd be greatly interested in your thoughts on, inter alia,
how many of these conditions apply to silklist itself. :)

Udhay

http://globalguerrillas.typepad.com/globalguerrillas/2009/03/manufacturing-fictive-kinship-.html

Friday, 06 March 2009
TRIBES!
This may fill in some gaps for people thinking about surviving the
future intact.

How do you manufacture a strong community that protects, defends and
advances the interests of its members?  You build a tribe.  Tribal
organization is the most survivable of all organizational types and it
was the dominant form for 99.99% of human history.  The most important
aspect of tribal organization is that it is the organizational cockroach
of human history.  It has proven it can withstand the onslaught of the
harshest of environments.  Global depression?  No problem.

If you are like most people in the 'developed world,' you don't have any
experience in a true tribal organization.  Tribal organizations were
crushed in the last couple of Centuries due to pressures from the
nation-state that saw them as competitors and the marketplace that saw
them as impediments.  All we have now it is a moderately strong nuclear
family (weakened via modern economics that forces familial diasporas), a
weak extended family, a loose collection of friends (a social circle), a
tenuous corporate affiliation, and a tangential relationship with a
remote nation-state.  That, for many of us, is proving to be
insufficient as a means of withstanding the pressures of the chaotic and
harsh modern environment (D2 in particular).

The solution to this problem is to build a tribe.  A group of people
that you are loyal to you and you are loyal in return.  In short, the
need for a primary loyalty to a group that really cares about your
survival and future success.

So how do you build a tribe?  A strong tribe, in this post-industrial
environment*, isn't built from the top down.  Instead it is built
organically from the bottom up.  A simple tribe starts with cementing
ties to your extended family, a connection of blood.  The second step is
to extend that network to include other families and worthy
individuals.  A key part of that is to build fictive kinship, a sense of
connectedness that leads to the creation of loyalty to the group.  That
kinship is built through (see Ronfeldt's paper for some background on this):

    * Story telling.  Shared histories and historical narratives.
    * Rites of passage.  Rituals of membership.  Membership is earned
not given due to the geographic location of birth or residence.
    * Obligations.   Rules of conduct and honor.  The ultimate penalty
being expulsion.
    * Egalitarian and often leaderless organization.  Sharing is prized.
    * Multi-skilled.  Segmental organization (lots of redundancy among
parts).
    * Two-way loyalty.  The tribe protects the members and the members
protect the tribe.   If this isn't implemented, you don't have a tribe,
you have a Kiwanis club.

The development of fictive kinship will likely be key to the development
of resilient communities (as it is already for global guerrillas).  We
can already see this process at work in the UK's Transition Towns
movement with their story telling, honoring elders, re-skilling, and
leaderless approach (see the 12 steps).

*Nationalism is a form of fictive kinship manufactured/bent to serve the
needs of the state during our industrial phase of economic organization.

Posted by John Robb on Friday, 06 March 2009 at 10:15 AM

-- 
((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

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