Mia Eisenstadt and Zaid Hassan -
Dec 13th, 2011

On October 29, we facilitated a session called "The Creative Process of Entrepreneurship", held at the Emerge Conference at the Said Business School in Oxford, England (see www.theemergeconference.org). One hundred and twenty participants attended the mini-workshop. The purpose of the session was to introduce them to an experience of the U-Process and for them to create physical models of their ideas of social enterprises.

Pressione recentes

Reos Partners -
Oct 10th, 2011

A collection of photos from our recent innovation festival in The Netherlands, part of a ten-tier Change Lab called Pluk.

Atualizações do projeto

Christel Scholten -
Dec 13th, 2011

Instituto EcoSocial (www.ecosocial.com.br) was created in 2002 to promote human, organisational, and social development. In late 2010, a new leadership team approached the Reos Partners São Paulo office to facilitate a Change Lab process for the organisation’s 50 members. The members wanted to broaden their perception of the opportunities and challenges currently facing Brazil, revisit their organisational vision, and expand the role they can play in the sustainable development of the country.

Colleen Magner -
Dec 13th, 2011

Reos Johannesburg is facilitating a community activation project in what is known as the “Northern Areas” of Port Elizabeth, an industrial city in the south of the country. Communities in this area have been hard-hit by a shrinking economy, job losses, and political infighting, resulting in increasing gang and drug activity, xenophobic attacks, and other social challenges.

Jeff Barnum -
Oct 7th, 2011

Our global and local systems of production and distribution, and indeed our individual lives, are all fueled by energy. The Industrial Revolution and the widespread use of fossil fuels for transportation and the generation of electricity have led the inhabitants of the global North to take energy for granted, while impoverished and rural populations in developing countries often go without electricity altogether.

Karin Hommels -
Oct 7th, 2011

Our world is changing. Global population is growing; cities are expanding at the expense of the countryside; natural resources, food, and services are in increasing demand. At the same time, some countries and regions are suffering from declining population, shrinking economies, and financial and fiscal problems. These changing circumstances have led to a growing awareness that we can no longer count on our economic welfare and way of living to continue as before. Institutions, businesses, and families feel insecure, anxious, unstable, and indecisive.

Eventos

February 10, 2012 - February 11, 2012
São Paulo, Brazil
March 26, 2012 - March 31, 2012
Utrecht, NL
June 18, 2012 - June 22, 2012
Halifax, Nova Scotia
July 09, 2012 - July 11, 2012
London, UK

From the Toolkit

LeAnne Grillo -
Dec 13th, 2011

Bringing diverse stakeholders together in a way that enables them to work effectively on their “stuck” issues is essential to what we do. While group members may be committed to the convening question, they may not agree on what the actual issue is, what is causing it, or what should be done about it.

LeAnne Grillo -
Oct 10th, 2011

One of the outcomes that we try to create through our Change Lab work is systemic change. While quick fixes can help in the short run, long-term fundamental change is really what is needed to address the complex social challenges facing the world today.