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	<title>Comments on: Design + Social Sector @ Aspen</title>
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	<description>Real Solutions. Wicked Problems.</description>
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		<title>By: Stephanie Gerson</title>
		<link>http://santafeinnovate.org/2009/11/27/design-social-sector-aspen/#comment-11</link>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Stephanie Gerson]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 02 Dec 2009 22:16:06 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[&quot;One of the outcomes of the Aspen event was a proposal for New Design, a soft structure linking interested design firms to philanthropic funders and  social challenges...&quot;

This is what I understand as the &#039;soft&#039; side of systems design - instead of physical resources flows, à la industrial ecology or permaculture, we&#039;re talking informational, financial, and human resource flows.  But as with &#039;harder&#039; side of systems design, we&#039;re still &#039;linking&#039; outputs to inputs, available resources to needs; in this case, linking interested design firms and philanthropic funding to social challenges.  Hence Wendell Berry&#039;s astute observation that &quot;the genius of America farm experts is very well demonstrated here: they can take a solution and divide it neatly into two problems.&quot;  Our work is therefore that of taking 2+ problems and (sometimes, re-)linking them into integrated solutions.  Or as permaculturist Bill Mollison would have it, the problem isn&#039;t an excess of slugs, but a deficiency of ducks (link the slugs to the ducks, and voilà).

I envision a dazzling mind-mappy dashboardy interface for tracking the available informational, financial, and human resources and needs, e.g. in a municipality, and facilitating the process of making connections.  Kinda like a match-making website but for systems design.  Whether or not that&#039;s absurd/realistic/desirable, here are three manifestations of soft systems design akin to the design + social sector idea that emerged at Aspen: 

&gt;&gt;Obama Works, a national grassroots organization, linked the time and toil campaign supporters willingly spend (lots!) to public service (whyobamaworks.org).  
&gt;&gt;All for Good, a craigslist service, similarly links folks who are willing to volunteer with local volunteer opportunities (allforgood.org). 
&gt;&gt;Lend Me Some Sugar links underutilized advertising dollars with social-enterprises-to-be (facebook.com/LendMeSomeSugar?v=app_4949752878).]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>&#8220;One of the outcomes of the Aspen event was a proposal for New Design, a soft structure linking interested design firms to philanthropic funders and  social challenges&#8230;&#8221;</p>
<p>This is what I understand as the &#8216;soft&#8217; side of systems design &#8211; instead of physical resources flows, à la industrial ecology or permaculture, we&#8217;re talking informational, financial, and human resource flows.  But as with &#8216;harder&#8217; side of systems design, we&#8217;re still &#8216;linking&#8217; outputs to inputs, available resources to needs; in this case, linking interested design firms and philanthropic funding to social challenges.  Hence Wendell Berry&#8217;s astute observation that &#8220;the genius of America farm experts is very well demonstrated here: they can take a solution and divide it neatly into two problems.&#8221;  Our work is therefore that of taking 2+ problems and (sometimes, re-)linking them into integrated solutions.  Or as permaculturist Bill Mollison would have it, the problem isn&#8217;t an excess of slugs, but a deficiency of ducks (link the slugs to the ducks, and voilà).</p>
<p>I envision a dazzling mind-mappy dashboardy interface for tracking the available informational, financial, and human resources and needs, e.g. in a municipality, and facilitating the process of making connections.  Kinda like a match-making website but for systems design.  Whether or not that&#8217;s absurd/realistic/desirable, here are three manifestations of soft systems design akin to the design + social sector idea that emerged at Aspen: </p>
<p>&gt;&gt;Obama Works, a national grassroots organization, linked the time and toil campaign supporters willingly spend (lots!) to public service (whyobamaworks.org).<br />
&gt;&gt;All for Good, a craigslist service, similarly links folks who are willing to volunteer with local volunteer opportunities (allforgood.org).<br />
&gt;&gt;Lend Me Some Sugar links underutilized advertising dollars with social-enterprises-to-be (facebook.com/LendMeSomeSugar?v=app_4949752878).</p>
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