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Using digital technology to create resilient neighbourhoods in Chicago’s South Side Nicola Bacon & Saffron Woodcraft Workshop July 19, 2012

Digital technology and resilient communities No 2

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Presentation from the second of two workshops run by Social Life and Cisco about using digital technology to build resilient communities in Chicago's South Side.

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Page 1: Digital technology and resilient communities No 2

Using digital technology to create resilient neighbourhoods in

Chicago’s South Side Nicola Bacon & Saffron Woodcraft

Workshop July 19, 2012

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Social Life is a new venture set up in 2012, with a strong heritage.

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We continue to build neighborhoods that fail to thrive as flourishing communities and struggle finding ways to revive failing areas.

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This is a global issue.

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We believe we can learn from both the mistakes, and the hopes, of the past.

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Where are the people?

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Our approach: putting people at the heart of placemaking

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Our work: hands-on local innovation

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Our tools: understanding how places innovate

Research investigating what enables some places to innovate successfully. Case studies about public and community sector innovation in cities. Focus on UK, USA, France & Netherlands.

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Our tools: understanding how places innovate

1  Prompts

2  Proposals

3  Prototypes

4  Sustaining5  Scaling

6  Systemic  change

The Young Foundation social innovation spiral

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Hands on innovation: practitioners workshops in in Malmö, Sweden

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Our work: social sustainability

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Our tools: a framework for social sustainability

The Young Foundation/Social Life Social Sustainability Framework, 2011

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Our first question: what is a community?

A UK mainstream version: defining a sustainable community Source: Egan review 2004

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A US version: what makes a successful place? Source: Project for Public Spaces

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But what about… •  A sense of identity: a place people feel they

belong •  Local history, myths & stories •  Strong social relationships, networks & bonds •  Trusting the neighbors •  Rituals and rhythms •  Physical boundaries to promote geographical

identity •  Visible leadership

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Stuck vs dynamic?

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Our tools: a framework for social sustainability

The Young Foundation/Social Life Social Sustainability Framework, 2011

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Future communities: Barking Riverside

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Eco Bicester: working with Cherwell council and the developer of exemplar stage to build social sustainability into the ambitious new development, planned to be 20,000 homes over 20 years.

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Working with Berkeley Group, exploring how to understand and measure the social sustainability of the places they build.

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Our work: resilient communities

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What is resilience? •  The ordinary superpower… •  Resilience is the ability of a

person, group or community to bounce back in the face of adversity

•  Adaptability matters for individuals, families, communities and cities

•  Good and bad happens everywhere

•  Resilience is not static: it can be changed.

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Survival resilience vs adaptive resilience

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Emotional

Social

Structural

Open up opportunities, increase confidence

Increase wellbeing, isolation, hope, optimism

We increase resilience through: •  Increasing access to

opportunity •  Boosting local

leadership •  Building identity and

belonging •  Creating and

strengthening local social networks and neighborliness

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What interventions build resilience? Full of life: tested in Brixton and Kingston in London, peer to peer learning, using volunteers trained by experts

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Wellbeing and resilience in Poplar, East London

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How do we build community resilience?

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Feedback from July 18

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21 participants from community and city-wide agencies

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Process of designing propositions for increasing resilience through digital technology moving from the general to the specific

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Generated four propositions for development

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A sample of the process

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Emotional

Social

Structural

Open up opportunities, increase confidence

Increase wellbeing, isolation, hope, optimism

We increase resilience through: •  Increasing access to

opportunity •  Boosting local

leadership •  Building identity and

belonging •  Creating and

strengthening local social networks and neighborliness

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The Task Ideas generation at speed, using the prompt cards. Your question: how would you build resilience in south side neighborhoods?

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Our four propositions

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The four propositions

•  All grounded in neighbourhoods and experience

•  All combining on-the-ground community development with digital backing

•  All building the conditions that will boost resilience

•  And encouraging take up of new technology, encouraging wider use

•  Boosting civic engagement, driving the creation of bridging as well as bonding social capital.

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Proposition 1 Title: Adding barter to main street Aims: To create a local “swap-shop”, on corner of 63rd and Cottage, which will: •  Encourage greater foot traffic to other stores in area •  Improve perception of area •  Increase local social interaction, especially between private owners and

public housing •  Ensure preservation of local heritage in murals •  Kick off with a one off festival/event to get people to the area •  Extend the footprint of a ‘safe’ area Local specificity: 63rd and Cottage Technology use: Digital timebanking/sharing platform to be reinforced by local activity

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Proposition 2 Title: Flash blocks Aims: Enable new use of empty spaces, in order to: •  Increase foot traffic •  Improve sense of community pride and ownership •  Provide a place to house community events •  Build community involvement •  Make the ‘sense of place’ more visible •  Potentially create more permanent opportunities for local entepreneurs Local specificity: tbc, seek out enthusiasm and energy Technology use: Digital technology is tool to communicate and convene, and then network after the event

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Proposition 3

Title: Building a city-wide placemaking app Aims: Through creating a city-wide placemaking app with local ownership and management we will: •  Increase belonging •  Build local identity •  Increase civic engagement •  Reduce social isolation by increasing connections •  Improve the quality of the built environment, create better places •  Bring together community organisations, developers, architects, citizens,

public service and business Local specificity: City-wide Technology use: multi-modal web, mobile and SMS capability available at all community access hubs

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Proposition 4 Title: Team Approach to Violence (TATV) Aims: To focus on neighborhoods that have highest levels of digital exclusion and violence, to use TV and mobile technology to inform government about crime and disorder, anonymously, in order to: •  Reduce violence and crime •  Share information •  Create sense of public services and community as one team •  Empower community and individuals •  Encourage civic minded decision making •  Create a platform for broader dialogue Local specificity: most troubled blocks, streets, neighborhoods in south side Technology use: Make use of familiar technology that is used in areas where digital uptake is low. Focus on technologies that are compatible with anonymity.

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Two questions

•  If we use Flash Block and Main Street as test beds for developing a city wide digital place making tool, what would you need to make it work for you?

•  We know this will take time, money and people, so what do we need to get it started?

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