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Collective Visioning: How Groups Can Work Together for a Just and Sustainable Future Kindle Edition

4.7 out of 5 stars 8 ratings
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Drawing on Linda Stout's 30 years of experience training organizers, advocates, activists, and coalition groups, Collective Visioning provides a revolutionary guide to collaboration within and across diverse organizations.

Editorial Reviews

Review

“To listen to Linda Stout is to be inspired, to gain new hope that a fundamental transformation of our culture is not only possible but may be much nearer than we expect.”  
—Dr. Ron Miller, President, New Visions Foundation


“This book encourages us that real love is about caring for all people, not just those who look and sound like us.”
—Rev. John H. Vaughn, Director, Twenty-First Century Foundation

“Stout has suffered the fates, encountered troubles, and defeated them. In short, her life has been devoted to a world of grace, peace, and beauty.”
—Studs Terkel, author and radio broadcaster

“This inspiring and practical guide to community organizing should be read by everyone involved in the struggle for justice, democracy, and equal rights. Linda Stout knows how to bring people together to be agents of change. Read this book and find out how you can do this too.”
—John Shattuck, President and Rector, Central European University, and former U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor

“Linda Stout’s book represents decades of profound experience activating ordinary people to do extraordinary things! She inspires people to take action toward the kinds of future they truly want, to experiment with expanding their sense of empowerment, build a cohort group for support, and get on with changing their world. Stout knows we proceed from ‘the dream’ outward into activism. She is a true master of inspire, inform, and activate.
Collective Visioning is where it all begins.”
—Christina Baldwin, coauthor of The Circle Way and author of Storycatcher

“The peace movement is too intellectual. There needs to be a book that speaks to regular people. Linda has taken the research we did and made it real and accessible.”
—Elise Boulding, cofounder, International Peace Research Association, and author of Cultures of Peace

“Linda’s book is urgently needed now. Many congregations are starting to engage in appreciative inquiry and visioning processes to identify hopes and dreams but lack the tools that can translate these into concrete action.”

Susan Leslie, Director, Office for Congregational Advocacy and Witness, Unitarian Universalist Association of Congregations

“Now more than ever
our world needs to make use of Linda’s heartfelt and innovative approaches to engage people of all backgrounds—including those whose voices are not often heard—in creating futures that work for all. Buy this accessible, straightforward guide today and make a difference tomorrow.”
—Amanda Trosten-Bloom, Managing Director, Corporation for Positive Change, and coauthor of The Power of Appreciative Inquiry

“Linda’s soul is well endowed with a generous, optimistic, and creative sense of the capacity for enlightenment and change for each fellow mortal, no matter what social class or ethnicity each represents. She offers opportunities for our democratic process to work, indeed, flourish, giving us hope in a climate so laden with negativity. Her book is most timely when we hunger for new approaches to solving so many problems eroding our communities.”
Loring Conant, Jr., MD, Assistant Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School

About the Author

Linda Stout grew up in North Carolina, daughter of a "mill-town girl" and a tenant farmer, later a mill worker. She was a 13th generation Quaker who grew up inspired by the Quakers' tradition of speaking up for their beliefs. She started the Piedmont Peace Project (PPP) in North Carolina in 1984. Winner of the National Grassroots Peace Award, she helped build the PPP into one of the strongest multi-racial, multi-issue low-income organizations in the state. After 10 years at PPP, she moved on in search of how to build power and do movement building at the national level. She moved to Massachusetts and directed a foundation, the Peace Development Fund, before starting a new organization, Spirit in Action, where she is now the director.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B004XOZ7LQ
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Berrett-Koehler Publishers (May 16, 2011)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ May 16, 2011
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 4.4 MB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 217 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.7 out of 5 stars 8 ratings

About the author

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Linda Stout
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Linda Stout is an activist and a visionary. In her lifetime, she has identified and worked against injustice within her world, her country and her community. Like so many women – a handful recognized, most invisible – she has refused to be silenced or stopped from building inclusive, direct democracy. As a thirteenth-generation Quaker born to a tenant-farming family in the Piedmont region of North Carolina, Linda first recognized racial and economic injustice in the mid-1970s. Refusing to support the racism and classism endemic in the textile mill she worked in, Linda left a desperately needed paycheck and began a lifelong mission for social change.

In 1985, after several years working for a civil rights law office, she founded a successful grassroots organization called the Piedmont Peace Project (PPP). PPP quickly attracted national attention for its success in drawing leadership from within a poor and working-class community–empowering people who never had a voice in policy decisions to speak up for their own interests–and building an organization where a high level of diversity was achieved and maintained at every level. PPP established itself in the midst of a daunting mix of well-organized corporate interests including textile giant Cannon Mills and icons of the political right wing such as the Moral Majority, Senator Jesse Helms, and the Ku Klux Klan. In order to work at the national level, Linda Stout accepted the Executive Director position at the Peace Development Fund (PDF) in 1995. Under Linda’s leadership, PDF tripled its grant making capacity and initiated several groundbreaking projects, including the Community Media Organizing Project, the Southeast Training for Trainers Program, and the National Listening Project.

Linda founded Spirit in Action in January 2000 to seek out transformative tools, models, and resources for building a powerful and visionary progressive movement. Spirit in Action’s core initiatives, Circles of Change and the Progressive Communicators Network, produce real change in communities across the country. Most notably, both programs have contributed to the rebuilding of New Orleans through Kids Rethink New Orleans Schools – a student-led initiative to rebuild New Orleans’ public schools, and KIN – the Katrina Information Network that has mobilized and educated reporters about the systemic issues of race and class at play in New Orleans and the Gulf region.

Linda is the author of countless articles and a critically acclaimed book, Bridging the Class Divide, published by Beacon Press in 1997. Her awards and honors include a Public Policy Fellowship from Harvard’s Radcliffe College, the Freedom Fighter Award of the Equal Rights Congress, the Petra Foundation Fellowship, and Studs Terkel’s profile of her life in his book, Hope Dies Last. She has been active in several volunteer organizations including Class Action, United for a Fair Economy, and the Radcliffe Public Policy Institute Economic Justice Task Force.

Always a crusader for justice speaking from the heart, Linda has given over 500 lectures, sermons, and workshops in the last 30 years in an effort to use her voice to unite change-makers to create a just world. Her newest book, Collective Visioning shows how to create an inspiring vision, including a process for building trust so that people from every background work together with passion, commitment and joy.

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4.7 out of 5 stars
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Customers find the book empowering, with one mentioning it provides stories of success to guide readers. The pacing receives positive feedback, with one customer describing it as a concise process that offers practical steps.

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4 customers mention "Empowerment"4 positive0 negative

Customers find the book empowering, with one mentioning it provides stories of success to guide readers, while another describes it as a road-map to the future they desire.

"...She offers practical steps and stories of success to guide, instruct and inspire...." Read more

"...Weaving powerful personal stories together with detailed accounts of her experience facilitating the process of collective visioning Linda Stout..." Read more

"...It is a road-map to the future you desire. Collective Visioning made me realize my art can become a vehicle for the betterment of my community...." Read more

"Perfect for Educators & Community Stakeholders..." Read more

3 customers mention "Pacing"3 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the pacing of the book, with one mentioning its concise process and another noting its practical steps.

"...She offers practical steps and stories of success to guide, instruct and inspire...." Read more

"Collective Visioning presents a clear and concise process of how groups can work together in a meaningful, authentic, and collaborative way to..." Read more

"...with many examples, diagrams and exercises that are imaginative,easy to follow and down to earth (a guide from vision to action) I just ordered 4..." Read more

Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on May 16, 2011
    Linda Stout offers three pillars for effective change-making in the United States and across the world: hope, vision and action. She offers practical steps and stories of success to guide, instruct and inspire. Her stories show us what is possible and also speaks to the depth and breadth of her life and work experiences. Collective Visioning lays out a process for how people can begin to develop a deep sense of community and connection. Stout articulates the importance of a shared vision for individuals and groups who are seeking to take action from a place of joy and hope--working from a positive and proactive position rather than being steeped in negativity. It is written in a very accessible way so that youth groups, as well as national organizations, can make use of the knowledge and step-by-step process imparted by Stout. I love the fact that Stout's writing is grounded in her life experiences and the work of the communities she has touched. It is authentic, practical and empowering. I highly recommend this book.
    4 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on May 17, 2011
    Collective Visioning presents a clear and concise process of how groups can work together in a meaningful, authentic, and collaborative way to create lasting change in our communities. Weaving powerful personal stories together with detailed accounts of her experience facilitating the process of collective visioning Linda Stout shows that you can make the world a more just and sustainable place--no matter who you are and where you came from. Linda herself came grew up in extreme poverty and now leads a national movement building organization. It is through this organization, Spirit in Action, that I originally experienced the collective visioning process first hand. It was that process of bringing together a diverse group of individuals to talk about the most pressing issues of our time through the lens of education that dramatically shifted the way I conducted my work on the national education scene. If you are looking for a process by which you can collectively work towards creating a better world, you should read Collective Visioning.
    5 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on June 8, 2011
    If you are reading my review, I have to say "Buy this book!" It is a must read, but it is so much more than a book. It is a road-map to the future you desire. Collective Visioning made me realize my art can become a vehicle for the betterment of my community. Linda has filled her book with many examples, diagrams and exercises that are imaginative,easy to follow and down to earth (a guide from vision to action) I just ordered 4 more copies: the perfect gift for my social change activist friends! Collective Visioning: How Groups Can Work Together for a Just and Sustainable Future (BK Currents (Paperback))
    2 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on December 13, 2014
    Linda is a wonderful author!
  • Reviewed in the United States on September 14, 2011
    Linda Stout shows us how collective vision can be used pragmatically to make positive change in communities. Her extensive experience and results in social justice work is great evidence of the power of collective visioning. She offers prompts, exercises and examples of ways to vision with groups around any issue.
    One person found this helpful
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