LC 00401: verschil tussen versies
Geen bewerkingssamenvatting |
Geen bewerkingssamenvatting |
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Regel 1: | Regel 1: | ||
ST presented so far is implicitly positioned in a local, municipal context. The maxim is: think globally, act locally. This expresses the idea that global change starts with local initiatives to give good examples of improvements to be implemented on a larger scale. This bears the question: is it possible to embed the | ST presented so far is implicitly positioned in a local, municipal context. The maxim is: think globally, act locally. This expresses the idea that global change starts with local initiatives to give good examples of improvements to be implemented on a larger scale. This bears the question: is it possible to embed the SI process in another SI process so that in the end we do act globally? The answer is given in the diagram shown below. The basic idea is that a SI process is seen as the implementation process in a higher level SI process. In this way, the SI process is extended from a local level to regional and national levels, and if we dream on, even up to the global world. | ||
Although the nested | Although the nested SI processes form a hierarchy, it does not mean that SI processes taken together have a strictly top-down or a bottom-up orientation. Just like a single SI process, the combined SI processes have circular processes at work at the same time. In this way, ideas and rules of engagement can flow freely upwards and downwards to set the right conditions for change at all levels. | ||
[[Bestand:The Social Theory process of getting beyond local initiatives.jpg|gecentreerd|miniatuur|599x599px|'''Figure:''' The Social Theory process of getting beyond local initiatives]] | [[Bestand:The Social Theory process of getting beyond local initiatives.jpg|gecentreerd|miniatuur|599x599px|'''Figure:''' The Social Theory process of getting beyond local initiatives]] |
Versie van 7 apr 2022 08:54
ST presented so far is implicitly positioned in a local, municipal context. The maxim is: think globally, act locally. This expresses the idea that global change starts with local initiatives to give good examples of improvements to be implemented on a larger scale. This bears the question: is it possible to embed the SI process in another SI process so that in the end we do act globally? The answer is given in the diagram shown below. The basic idea is that a SI process is seen as the implementation process in a higher level SI process. In this way, the SI process is extended from a local level to regional and national levels, and if we dream on, even up to the global world.
Although the nested SI processes form a hierarchy, it does not mean that SI processes taken together have a strictly top-down or a bottom-up orientation. Just like a single SI process, the combined SI processes have circular processes at work at the same time. In this way, ideas and rules of engagement can flow freely upwards and downwards to set the right conditions for change at all levels.
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