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Episode 10 30.03.2021
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How does a decentralized youth movement with 500 local hubs coordinate climate action at the national level without losing its grassroots soul? Naina Agrawal-Hardin, organizer with the Sunrise Movement and the US Youth Climate Strike Coalition, reveals the architecture of “power with” , and why radical decentralization is both the movement’s greatest strength and its hardest challenge. Subscribe and follow for more from this series on real-world collaboration. Naina Agrawal-Hardin joins Paul Verschure and Jenna Bednar to explain how the Sunrise Movement , the youth-led organization behind the Green New Deal’s entry into mainstream American politics , actually functions as a collaborative system. Drawing on her experience as a political and partnership strategist, Agrawal-Hardin describes a structure where over 500 autonomous local hubs organize under shared principles while a national staff coordinates strategy, campaigns, and relationships with federal policymakers including the Biden administration. The conversation centers on a fundamental tension in large-scale collaboration: how to maintain coherence without hierarchy. Agrawal-Hardin distinguishes between “power over” and “power with,” explaining that Sunrise deliberately builds collective power among young people rather than concentrating authority. Local hubs develop their own demands, share strategies with each other, and retain autonomy over their campaigns. National leadership provides infrastructure and strategic direction but does not presume to know local contexts better than the people living in them. The discussion reveals how conflict resolution, communication breakdowns, and the challenge of proximity to political power create real friction between grassroots organizers and national staff. Agrawal-Hardin is candid about moments when the national organization has been too directive or insufficiently transparent, and how feedback loops and open calls with grassroots leaders have been used to repair trust. Her personal trajectory , from rural roots in Bihar and Appalachia to organizing at the national level as a teenager , illustrates how lived experience with climate vulnerability drives collaborative commitment. Key topics include the theory of change combining people power and political power, how decentralized movements maintain strategic coherence, the role of storytelling and shared narrative in sustaining collaboration, conflict between local autonomy and national coordination, and why the Green New Deal represents a vision broad enough to unite diverse communities around climate action. Part of the Ernst Strüngmann Forum series on Collaboration, produced with the Convergent Science Network.
Tagged as:
Climate Action climate activism collaboration Local Hubs Movement National Level sunrise movement
About the author call_made
Both the triumphs of humanity and its most evil deeds have resulted from collaboration. In a time where humanity is required to aspire to the former and minimize the latter, the question arises of how collaboration arises and why it fails. Surprisingly, this phenomenon, so central to who we are, is not well understood. Hence, a collaborative effort is required to understand collaboration in its full biological, psychological, sociological, cultural, and economic complexity and to translate this understanding into operational impact. This series of podcasts is one step toward achieving these complementary goals. The Collaboration Podcast presents interviews with people who are central orchestrators of collaboration in various domains including business, government, science, art, health, sustainability, and the military. The discussions were conducted by Prof. Dr. Paul F.M.J. Verschure and members of the Program Advisory Committee of the Ernst Strungmann Forum on Collaboration (https://www.esforum.de/forums/ESF32_Collaboration.html) during 2021 and had the goal to sketch a map of opportunities, challenges, and obstacles in human collaboration. The forum took place in May 2022, and now we would like to share this series of interviews with a broader audience. The full report of the Forum will be published in 2023 by MIT Press. The podcast was produced by the Convergent Science Network (https://www.convergentsciencenetwork.org/). Context: The stability of social systems depends critically on realizing sustainable methods of “collaboration,” yet how and by which means collaboration is achieved is not clearly understood; neither are the conditions or processes that lead to its breakdown or failure. Collaboration can be understood as cooperation between agents toward mutually constructed goals. Part of the reason for our lack of understanding is that the phenomenon of collaboration is, by nature, a highly multidisciplinary problem, and effective research into its complexities has been difficult to achieve across the broad range of scientific and technical disciplines involved. The need for a fundamental understanding of collaboration, however, has become increasingly important. Not only does humankind demand answers as it attempts to address critical challenges at multiple scales (e.g., climate change, migration, enhanced automation, social and economic inequality), but ever-increasing technological and economic means of interconnecting people and societies are disrupting long-established, familiar patterns of how we interact. Radical technological changes that are ongoing have the potential to reshape collaboration in ways that are currently hard to predict or influence (e.g., by altering configurations in interaction, information creation, and modes of communication). On one hand, such changes could disrupt hitherto stable forms of collaboration by affecting critical communication channels and traditional roles, as can be observed in the rapidly changing patterns in governance, commerce, and social interaction. Conversely, technology could lead to the emergence of novel, successful forms of collaboration that deviate from traditional “hierarchical” architectures. Evidence of this can be seen in areas as diverse as highly automated manufacturing plants, the open science movement, collaborative software repositories, user-centered services, and the sharing of economy-based modes of organization. Without a fundamental understanding of the mechanisms, processes, and boundary conditions of collaboration, it is not possible to evaluate or predict which of these possible scenarios are sustainable or even plausible. The Forum “How Collaboration Arises and Why it Fails” (May 8–13, 2022, Location: Frankfurt am Main, Germany) Chairs: Andreas Roepstorff and Paul Verschure Program Advisory Committee: Jenna Bednar, Julia R. Lupp, Bhavani R. Rao , Andreas Roepstorff, Ferdinand von Siemens, and Paul Verschure
Exploring the convergence of neuroscience, robotics, and AI through conversations with leading researchers since 2010.
A project of the Convergent Science Network Foundation.
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