Asset-Based Community Development (ABCD): Looking Back to Look Forward (3rd Edition): In conversation with John McKnight about the heritage of ABCD and its place in the world today
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About this ebook
This book provides a detailed background to Asset Based Community Development (ABCD), with a particular emphasis on the contributions of the people, such as Illich, Alinsky, Mendelsohn, Miller, Snow, Block and others, who have been most influential in shaping the conceptual framework and practice of this approach.
It also provides a deep insight into Professor John McKnight’s (one of the originators, and the most central figure in ABCD alongside Professor Jody Kretzmann) thinking on society and community. It offers a wealth of commentary on the challenges facing society and community, what needs to change, and how we might go about it.
This publication is therefore a must read for anybody interested in social policy and community development. It will be of particular interest to those seeking to gain a deep, well informed and rounded understanding of Asset Based Community Development from its beginning to the current day.
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Asset-Based Community Development (ABCD) - Cormac Russell
Third Edition
Copyright 2020 © Cormac Russell
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form without the written permission of the publisher, except by reviewers, who may quote brief passages in a review.
ISBN: 9798534266986
First printing March 2018
Third Edition July 2021
Published Independently
Visit www.nuturedevelopment.org
Or for further information on our ABCD training and support offers, visit communityrenewal.learnworlds.com
"There are many lines in this short, insightful book that resonated with me. We are indeed too often ‘looking for solutions in well-lit places, instead of revealing the invisible all around us.’ Cormac’s book, and the voice of John McKnight and others contained within, does shine a light on the invisible. It makes us question what we thought we knew about people’s capacity and agency and then it calls on us to change our behaviours accordingly.
As with many radical concepts, the prevailing culture works against change. Too often, in practice I have seen ABCD reduced to producing an asset map as part of a consultation on a community plan. The system has a strong pull towards acting in its own self-interest. It was a pleasure, therefore, to spend time with this book and be reminded of the radical origins of the concept and to think again about what might be possible if we thought differently about ourselves, our communities and our governance."
Jennifer Wallace
Head of Policy
Carnegie UK Trust (United Kingdom & Rep. of Ireland)
This book is a gift. A gift for those who love John McKnight and Asset-Based Community Development and a gift from Cormac Russell who has captured the story of John’s life and the people who have influenced John with such eloquence. This book is a pleasure to read as the interview style helps us feel like we are reading a live story, a ‘fireside chat with John,’ while giving us important, quotable insights into John’s thinking. Cormac is one of the few people who could write this book. He understands ABCD almost as well as John and can therefore help the reader to engage in the fine nuances of John’s brilliance. I highly recommend this book for change makers around the world.
Paul Born
Tamarack Institute
Co-CEO Tamarack & Director, Vibrant Communities
Author of several books including: "Deepening Community. Finding Joy
Together in Chaotic times." (Canada)
"Through insightful and thought-provoking interviews with John, Cormac has certainly given ABCD animators and connectors around the world a deep understanding and appreciation of the rich heritage and history of ABCD. He has provided the trumpet call for all to continually understand the past and faithfully journey into the future of being within communities.
As a public servant, Cormac has provided me with practical handles and clear perspectives, giving impetus for courage and boldness to arise in order to go beyond the comfort zone and safe facade of institutions.
Through the endearing and exceedingly deep conversations with John, I seem to have encountered him face-to-face, and heard the soulful voice of a man with a keen mind, a big heart and a deep belief in the power of communities. This book certainly honors a man whose lifetime work has proliferated to different communities in many countries.
I heartily recommend Looking Back to Look Forward to all who believe that our communities indeed have all the assets to pursue and exceed our own dreams and aspirations."
Mr. Phua Chun Yat
Head of Planning and Organisation Development
AMKFSC Community Services Ltd, (Singapore)
I highly recommend Looking Back to Look Forward to anyone with a passion to unleash the power of communities for positive social change. Over the past five years, Wellspring Foundation has worked closely with Cormac Russell and Nurture Development to help 49 schools connected to 484 villages in Rwanda make a significant shift from scarcity to abundance through Asset-Based Community Development (ABCD). The results have been astonishing. As communities step up and take ownership over the education of their own children they are accomplishing things that aid agencies and governments typically spend years trying to accomplish: drop outs are reducing, children are receiving nutritious meals, school infrastructure is being improved, and teachers are being better supported, all through community effort. By some estimates, community investment is outpacing government investment 3:1. In most cases, Rwandan communities have realized that ABCD is merely re-introducing them to a language they already had before the ‘culture killers’ came. I have never had the privilege of meeting John McKnight and so I found it fascinating to gain an insider’s view of his extraordinary life, his influences, and how ABCD was birthed. So stoke a fire, grab a cup of hot tea, and join the conversation.
Richard Taylor
Co-Founder and Rwanda Country Director
The Wellspring Foundation for Education (Rwanda)
"This is a timely and important book, taking us on a wondrous journey through the evolution of John McKnight’s life and work. In it we meet people John considers most influential for him. In the process, it also grounds us in the work and ideas of people who have informed and shaped what has come to be known as Asset-Based Community Development (ABCD).
As John’s own thinking has moved from a critical analysis of institutions and professionals to a practical approach for citizens and their associations, and then gradually into a varied and adaptive set of different approaches that seek to fit the local context and asset base, ABCD has become a kind of worldwide movement. Here we learn through guided conversations between Cormac and John how each of these one-of-a-kind people informed his thought. As importantly – it also features Cormac’s own take on things as he looks forward to how ABCD principles and practices can be applied to an ever-widening circle of people and places.
Riveting as a public speaker and storyteller, one of John’s gifts is that he has constantly sought to deepen his own understanding of ‘how things work,’ as these intellectual and personal friends so aptly demonstrate. Throughout, his core values have been consistent, but his ability to deepen and reweave his analysis based on new experiences and learning from others is truly remarkable. And his capacity to deliver his evolving analysis to a wide range of audience, through stories and clear summary principles, is – for most of us who have travelled with him - unrivalled.
In terms of the people John describes here, it is noteworthy that these folks are all renegades, and most had a following of their own. They are independent, radical (going to the ‘root of things’), and feisty. John tried to understand them in their own terms and his descriptions of their role in his own thinking are telling. His measure of their role and value for us all was this: ‘how does this person help me understand my experience?’
And what a cast of characters it is! Ivan Illich and ‘counter-productivity,’ Bob Mendelsohn and the ‘medicalization of everyday life,’ Saul Alinksy and the ‘basics of organizing for power,’ Judith Snow on ‘welcoming the stranger,’ Jerry Miller and the illusion of believing anything gets better by institutionalizing dangerous
people, Bob Rodale and faithful stewardship of the land and its bounty; Frank Haiman on the value of every person – especially those at the edges, Peter Block and how to recognize and enhance the abundant community,
Stan Hallett and the necessity of citizen associations and alternatives to the kind of modern technology that breaks down rather than enhances community, and Jody Kretzmann, who as co-founder of the ABCD, has been the personal embodiment of ABCD values in practice.
In exploring these various people, Cormac puts his finger on the rich veins of energy and insight that run through John’s thought. When Cormac notes, for example, that honoring the heritage of ABCD will require that we all resist the deeply embedded tendency to ‘fix, save and deliver,’ he is astutely summarizing the core of ABCD as an alternative to top-down and outside-in ‘help’ that is so typically offered by professional service delivery systems, and that curtail or erode the prospects for citizen action and the rejuvenation of varied forms of local community life.
But what is perhaps most remarkable about this book and set of conversations, is that Cormac not only goes deeply into these friendships, he also goes beyond them. He adds his own take, and it is an extraordinarily important take. He is at his best when he looks forward, and wonders ‘out loud’ about where it is all going. His capacity to turn a phrase may actually rival John, such as, ‘we are not self-reliant but other reliant..’ or, ‘the importance of moving from what’s wrong to what’s strong.’
Just as we can be glad that Cormac helps John put these people and their influence into perspective, we can be glad that we have Cormac and his own growing network of people and learning sites. John is still searching, no doubt, and thankfully, so is Cormac. Cormac’s own clarity about the key principles of ABCD and his creative and tenacious way of applying them in varied settings through his impressive work with Nurture Development, in the UK and across the globe, auger well for the future of the movement."
Tom Dewar -Senior Faculty member of the ABCD Institute.
Formerly Co-Director of the Aspen Institute’s Roundtable on Community
Change and taught at Johns Hopkins’ School for Advanced International
Studies, helping direct its Center for Democratic Development
"What’s most stirred in me after reading this book twice is an overwhelming sense of comfort, settling into my bones and heart from several directions.
The comfort of mentorship. From its oldest roots, hospitality asks both the host and the stranger to answer three questions: Where have you been? Why are you here? And where are you going? John, simply and with an open heart, answered those three questions for himself in the pages of this book, and has offered a gentle and open invitation to each of us on the doorstep of this book to do the same, that we might plant the seeds of hospitality around us through sharing our stories.
The comfort of legacy. Genuine legacy is not what you are remembered for by others, but rather how the world is different because you were in it. John’s firm insistence on bringing the theory of ABCD into real community change, and his ability to tell countless stories about change, is a legacy worth learning from and living into.
The comfort of homecoming. Reading this book caused me to return, over and over again, to a deep knowing in me that what John is saying about community—and ‘its counterfeits’— is true. It offers hope to me that if I follow this community-building path it will take me home to what I know is true in my bones: Everyone has gifts and everyone has place in community.
The comfort of libation. This book is a libation, a pouring of wisdom into the collective bowl of community life. John’s humble