One of our favourite projects this year has been our collaboration with EPIM (European Philanthropic Initiative for Migration) on migration governance. We supported them with systems analysis and design for their new strategy. A couple of weeks ago, we also facilitated a leverage pathways session at the EPIM Forum. It was an incredible two-day event filled with active participation and meaningful engagement! Also resulted in what Carlotta Cataldi called “the most beautiful floor iceberg model” (pictures prove it) :)? It is always a pleasure for ReImagined Futures to be part of this systemic work! Thank you, EPIM (European Philanthropic Initiative for Migration), Brian Blankinship, Paz Costantini and Viliana Dzhartova?? #systemsthinking #transformation #migration? #migrationgovernance
ReImagined Futures
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We help organisations make sense of complexity and collaborate towards systems change
关于我们
We help organisations to make sense of complexity and collaborate towards systems change. At the core of our practice, we are a collective of experienced systems change practitioners, who can support your organisation evolve and create the regenerative and resilient world that we deserve to live in. Our collective coalesces together specialist knowledge and decades of experience in social innovation and design for sustainable development, across the academic, non-profit, governmental and corporate worlds. We have individually and collectively, had the opportunity to work with some of the leading organisations in the world, including Ashoka, the African Development Bank, Teach For All, Samsung, Caritas, EIT Climate-KIC, and the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, amongst others. And we we have a documented track record of success in the social impact, education, sustainability consulting, maritime, humanitarian and international development sectors, to name a few. The services we offer include; systems mapping, design for social innovation and transformation, creative and embodied facilitation, principle-based sustainability perspectives and astute transdisciplinary analysis, amongst other proven strategies to effect long-term systems change.
- 网站
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https://www.reimaginedfutures.org
ReImagined Futures的外部链接
- 所属行业
- 商务咨询服务
- 规模
- 2-10 人
- 总部
- Barcelona | London | Nicosia | Prague | Sofia
- 类型
- 合营企业
- 创立
- 2020
地点
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主要
OO,Barcelona | London | Nicosia | Prague | Sofia
ReImagined Futures员工
动态
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?? It is exciting to see that more and more universities are starting to teach systems thinking! Our friends at University of Exeter are looking for a Lecturer in Systems Thinking, a super opportunity for academics in our network! Deadline is 4.12.2024, apply now -?https://lnkd.in/eRJPt_S3 #jobs #systemsthinking #academicjobs #sustainability Maya Vachkova Jacqueline Bagnall Guillermo Casasnovas Joss Colchester Suzanne Jenkins Rosina Malagrida Federica Massa Saluzzo Ivo Velitchkov Diana Velasco Johan Schot Toban Shadlyn
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We love working on causal-loop diagrams but we are acutely aware that those are just tools. As Daniel Christian Wahl says, systems thinking is a lot more than a set of tools, it is “an art form of creatively dancing with complexity that has the power to transform us and our world”. #systemsthinking #complexity #transformation
PhD, MSc, BSc, FRSA; Author of Designing Regenerative Cultures, RSA Bicentenary Medal for Regenerative Design 2021 recipient, catalyst, mentor, educator, activist, speaker, bioregional weaver, regenerative agroforestry
... Too often systems thinking is equated with a set of very specific methodologies, like the drawing of influence diagrams, feedback loops, and stock and flow systems models.?These are all useful tools in the toolbox of systems thinking, but to equate them with whole-systems thinking itself would be analogous to equating a set of brushes, an easel and a canvas with the art of painting.?More than a set of tools, systems thinking is an art form of creatively dancing with complexity that has the power to transform us and our world. It can make us see ourselves, and our world, with different eyes. ... https://lnkd.in/eg9iPzQ
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??The Global Commission on the Economics of Water advocates for valuing the Hydrological Cycle as a Global Common Good. In their recent analysis, the ecological markers of water stress and their socioeconomic impact, and illustrates the key role that #water plays in the economy. Five missions are suggested to address the most important and interconnected challenges of the global #watercrisis: 1?? Launch a new revolution in #foodsystems; 2?? Conserve and restore natural habitats critical to protect green water; 3?? Establish a circular water economy; 4?? Enable a clean-energy and AI-rich era with much lower water intensity; 5?? Ensure that no child dies from unsafe water by 2030. ??Check the amazing visuals of their interactive website and read the report here: https://lnkd.in/d7RneUrt #EconomicsOfWater #WaterSecurity
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A few weeks ago we completed our forth agrifood systems map and, of course, soil health came up as the highest leverage point. Here is why: “Essentially, all life depends on the soil ... There can be no life without soil and no soil without life; they have evolved together.” — Charles E. Kellogg, USDA Yearbook of Agriculture, 1938. Thank you, UN Biodiversity and FAO, for this visual! #soil #sustainability #systemsthinking
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We absolutely love these collaborative repositories?and this networked peer #learning approach!?? Our entire team has taken Acumen Academy’s Systems Practice course, Kumu is our absolutely favourite playground, and we host regular team learning sessions on different #systemsthinking and #systemschange tools. What do you have to add to this joint resource list???
I'm sharing a few resources on ?????????????? ????????????????. If you know of other resources, please feel free to add them. ?????????? ????????????, ?????????????? ?????? ???????????? ?????????????? 1. Systems Thinking Basics - Virginia Anderson and Lauren Johnson | ?????? - 143 ?????????? https://lnkd.in/g-SZXMXJ 2. Systems Thinking Tools - Daniel H. Kim | ?????? - 60 ?????????? https://lnkd.in/g9VHu4_b ?????????????? ?????????????? 1. Systems Practice - Acumen Academy https://lnkd.in/gyckPMKg 2. Systems thinking and Practice - The Open University https://lnkd.in/gJuVtte8 3. Mastering systems thinking in practice - The Open University https://lnkd.in/gnqSitX2 4. Systems Thinking Basics - Tayseer Almattar through Coursera https://lnkd.in/gC2BcPRS 5. Systems Thinking - Derek Cabrera https://lnkd.in/gTUFVxzk 6. (????????) Systemic design for tackling complexity - SERVICE DESIGN COLLEGE https://lnkd.in/gcMtUPcy 7. (????????) Training Camp - Cabrera Lab https://lnkd.in/gkpmZsXd ?????????????????? ???????????? Student resources - Map the System Canada https://lnkd.in/gWwCuyax ??????????????? 1. Thinking in Systems: A Primer - Donella Meadows? https://lnkd.in/gUCUFVek 2. The Fifth Discipline: The Art & Practice of The Learning Organization - Peter M. Senge https://lnkd.in/g2QQAwcn 3. Design Journeys through Complex Systems - Peter Jones & Kristel Van Ael https://lnkd.in/gmSZr7tz 4. Closing the Loop - Sheryl Cababa https://lnkd.in/gbJ2nabe 5. Systems Thinking Made Simple (Systems Thinking for Individuals) - Derek Cabrera & Laura Cabrera https://lnkd.in/gkGSfKBE 6. The Systems Thinking Playbook: Exercises to Stretch and Build Learning and Systems Thinking Capabilities - Linda Booth Sweeney & Dennis Meadows https://lnkd.in/gG2T7VZU 7. Learning Systems Thinking: Essential Nonlinear Skills and Practices for Software Professionals - Diana Montalion https://lnkd.in/gXGg7-78 8. 5 books to help you become more systems and complexity aware - Michelle Monty https://lnkd.in/g6UibXa9 9. Reddit post - Practical system theory books https://lnkd.in/gEuh9uha ?????????????????????? ???? ?????????????? ???????????????? ?????????????????? 1. Systems thinking hub - Andi Roberts https://lnkd.in/gWPVAuNW 2. The Systems Thinker https://lnkd.in/gZMpJWjY ???????????????????????? ?????? ?????????????? 1. Systems Innovation - Joss Colchester https://lnkd.in/gBjenXSm 2. School of System Change - Anna Birney https://lnkd.in/gnauQu85 Thank you, Viliana Dzhartova, for the recommendation! 3. Waters Center for Systems Thinking ? https://lnkd.in/gG4cDDh8 ?????????????????? ?????? ?????????????????? 1. Design Council Systemic Design Toolkit - Design Council https://lnkd.in/gsG5wjnn 2. Practice Tools and Toolkits?- Systemic Design Association https://lnkd.in/g-bq3kBy ????????????? 1. Kumu - Kumu https://www.kumu.io/ 2. Tools for Systems Thinkers: Systems Mapping - Leyla Acaroglu https://lnkd.in/gcvmD7u8
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The Code of Capital by Katharina Pistor, Columbia Law School. ??What stops our institutions from transforming? Greed? Capitalism? Inequality? ?But what actually is capital? Why are only some objects, ideas, and promises to pay protected by law? What is it that transforms them into wealth generating assets? ??Katharina Pistor explains how, behind the closed doors of private attorneys, capital is created — and why this little-known activity is one of the main drivers of wealth supremacy, a term coined by Marjorie Kelly. ? "The Code of Capital" is one of the most influential legal books in recent years. In the comment section: Explore the ways debt, complex financial products, and other assets are selectively coded to protect and reproduce private wealth. https://lnkd.in/dfXtsjjD #capital #systemicchange #wealth #systemchange #planetaryboundaries
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When do we start listening?
When do we start listening? The tragedies of Valencia and other places are a result of our destruction of water cycles everywhere. These tragedies are not coming out of nowhere. One of the people clearly showing the connections is Michal Krav?ík. Already three months ago he was warning about potential downpours in autumn. What else does it take to take water cycles seriously and put our attention to where we can make a meaningful difference with the time we have? From the original post: "MEDITERRANEAN COUNTRIES EXPECT HARD TIMES IN AUTUMN I'm afraid what will happen in autumn in the Mediterranean countries. The temperatures of the Mediterranean sea reach the temperature, that it normally reaches in the second half of August. And not only that. If you look at the hot spots, they are spreading from the land. The epicenter of the extreme temperature is in the area of Tunisia. Actually, where the desertification of the Sahara began about 5500 years ago (Hongquan Zhang, 2022). See on the map how this epicenter has expanded over the course of two days. It is actually the driest place around the Mediterranean Sea. Since the desertification of the region also spread to the north from the sea to Central Europe, the whole macro-region is gradually being dried out and overheated. And this dried-up landscape gradually overheats the Mediterranean Sea, which gradually becomes an overheated puddle. This will certainly threaten the future of tourism in the area and the subsequent decline if nothing is done. That's one fact. The second one, which sends chills down my spine, is the sudden hypothermia of the parched regions around the sea during the winter solstice. Then the opposite effect occurs. Dramatic hypothermia will cause an unprecedented suction of warm air masses from the atmosphere to the land. Therefore, there is an extreme risk of extremely heavy downpours that will have devastating effects with enormous damage caused by flash floods. And I don't see a single state that would solve this. Please mobilize your governments and politicians to address this urgently. We, in Central Europe are not behind water. Here we also sent to the sea." Michal Krav?ík has been doing incredible work and he deserves much more recognition for what he has done in the field of water. With Zach Weiss and Water Stories we are currently working to showcase more of the amazing work he is doing. #watercycle #valencia #flood
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“Networks are the only form of organisation on this planet used by living systems. These networks result from self-organisation, where individuals or species recognise their interdependence and organise in ways that support the diversity and viability of all. #Networks create the conditions for #emergence, which is how life changes.” Thank you Jesús Martín González for this lovely summary and Berkana Institute for all the pioneering work you inspire!
Anthropologist of an Ecosocial Transition (Sustainability & Wellbeing) | Transdisciplinary Researcher | Essayist | Creating Meaningful Synergies | Paradoxical Thinker |
"Despite current ads and slogans, the world doesn’t change one person at a time. It changes as networks of relationships form among people who discover they share a common cause and vision of what’s possible." - Margaret J. Wheatley & Deborah Frieze Yesterday I had a video conference with Vijaykumar V and one of the proposals was to talk about social and cultural #transformation. Just this topic came up at the end of our conversation and to this question, I told him that I was just writing a post about an interesting ‘theory of change’ that seems very plausible to me. This theory is explained in a small 9-page booklet by the Berkana Institute called "Using Emergence to Take Social Innovation to Scale" (link in the comments). Some Insights: ?? "Networks are the only form of organization on this planet used by living systems. These networks result from self-organization, where individuals or species recognize?their interdependence and organize in ways that support the diversity and viability of all. #Networks create the conditions for #emergence, which is how life changes." ?? "In nature, change never happens as a result of top-down, pre-conceived strategic plans, or from the mandate of any single individual or boss. Change begins as local actions spring up simultaneously in many different areas. If these changes remain disconnected, nothing happens beyond each locale. However, when they become connected, local actions can emerge as a powerful system with influence at a more global or comprehensive level. (Global here means a larger scale, not necessarily the entire planet.)" THE LIFE CYCLE OF EMERGENCE STAGE 1?? "We live in a time when coalitions, alliances and networks are forming as the means to create societal change. There are ever more networks and now, networks of networks. These networks are essential for people finding like-minded others, the first stage in the lifecycle of emergence." STAGE 2?? "The second stage of?emergence is the development of communities of practice (CoPs). Many such smaller, individuated communities can spring from a robust network. CoPs are also self-organised. People share a common work and realize there is great benefit to being in relationship. They?use this community to share what?they know, to support one another, and to intentionally create new knowledge for their field of practice." STAGE 3?? "The third stage in emergence can never be predicted. It is the sudden appearance of a system that has real power and influence. Pioneering efforts that hovered at the periphery suddenly become the norm. The practices developed by courageous communities become the accepted standard. People no longer hesitate about adopting these approaches and methods, and they learn them easily. Policy and funding debates now include the perspectives and experiences of these pioneers." ? Finally, the slogan I use ‘Creating Meaningful Synergies’ fits perfectly into the emergency cycle.
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Looking to dive deeper into regenerative agriculture and ecosystem restoration? Commonland curated a list of leading expert voices and podcasts on topic. From agroforestry insights on Farmerama Radio to exploring financial returns on soil health with Investing in Regenerative Agriculture and Food.?? Tune in and check out the full list in the post below!?? #RegenerativeAgriculture #impactinvesting #EcosystemRestoration #SustainableFarming #WildlifeConservation
?? Looking to learn more about restoring ecosystems on the go? We’ve gathered some of our favorite podcasts for you! ?? 1?? 'Farmerama Radio' by Abby Rose, Jo Barratt and Katie Revell Explore transformative solutions in the regenerative world from farmers, researchers and leading experts. From agroforestry to no-till farming, this podcast gathers expert voices on how holistic practices are revitalising ecosystems and combating climate change. 2?? 'Investing in Regenerative Agriculture and Food' by Koen van Seijen Curious about how to invest in a sustainable future? Learn how investing in soil health and ecosystems can bring both ecological and financial returns from pioneers in regenerative agriculture. 3?? 'Digging Deeper' by Stichting Boerengroep Wageningen This podcast explores agricultural practices that aim for a just, resilient, and ecologically sound food system. From the fields of the Netherlands to the far-reaching corners of the world, their episodes provide knowledge from both scientists and practitioners to explore every topic from multiple perspectives. 4?? 'Lifeworlds' by Alexa Firmenich Through inspiring stories from guests deeply connected to ecologies, this podcast explores how to align your life with nature, uncovering what’s needed to collaborate with other life forms and engage in acts of brilliant restoration. 5?? 'Designing Nature’s Half' by Robert Campellone & Tom Miewald Join experts as they tackle the intersection of climate change and biodiversity loss, sharing insights on large landscape conservation and sustainable planning to secure a thriving future for nature and humanity. 6?? 'Deep Seed' by Raphael Esterhazy An independent series sponsored by Soil Capital, this podcast features stories of hope from those at the very roots of the regenerative farming movement. Tune into award-winning stories from regenerative farmers shaping a positive ecological future. This podcast highlights the impact of farming practices on our food systems, health, and the planet. #NatureRestoration #RegenerativeAgriculture #SustainableFarming #EcosystemRestoration #NatureLovers #WildlifeConservation