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Author Archives "Chris Corrigan"

Connection and disconnection and reconnection

March 10, 2026 By Chris Corrigan Uncategorized No Comments

I have a bunch of little slogans that I use to help me make sense of my hosting practice. One of these is “the shortest distance between two people is a story,” a line that I learned years ago from Patti Digh. I read Patti’s blog daily and today she evoked the line again, talking about the connections that were made in a weekend long creative writing workshop. Appreciation for this line. It helps me remember that a story, narrative, anecdote, and nonsense are ways that we connect, or ways that we suddenly see who we are with, sometimes for better and sometimes for worse!

Have you ever had a frozen shoulder? I have my first, and hopefully only one. I did something to my shoulder in the summer, I don;t know what, but it managed to degrade and evade physio treatment to the point where my physio team said I should get a cortisone injection. Yesterday I got an early start and headed over the North Vancouver to Revive Medical where a very clear and efficient doctor administered an injection and my shoulder began to feel better immediately. I have work to do to rebuild strength and range of motion, but boy is it nice to have the acute pain gone.

You know what else is frozen? Tottenham’s chances of surviving to play another season in both the Champions League and the Premier League. Today’s Champions League match against Athletico Madrid was a car wreck, surrendering four goals in the first twenty minutes and causing Tudor to retroactively admit that selecting Kinsky in goal was a bad idea. The match finished 5-2 with Porro and Paulinha colliding at the end and both suffering nasty head injuries, summing up everything this team is at the moment. Rudderless. The Premier League campaign is worse than last year’s and that is saying something. We are in very real danger of being relegated for the first time since 1976-77. And to be honest, I wouldn’t care too much. A season in the Championship might be everything we need to get our heads clear after the last few years of debacle.

Locally, our TSS Rovers are gearing up for the season. The women have done a tremendous job of preparation, winning the Metro Women’s Soccer League title for the first time in their 15 year history, securing the title away in Abbotsford. Given the football I’ve been watching all winter, I can’t wait to see some quality play for a change! If you’d like to come out to a match this spring let me know and I’ll send a ticket your way.

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What’s the nature of our relationship with the USA

March 6, 2026 By Chris Corrigan Democracy No Comments

When the women’s Olympic hockey final was on, CBC showed packed bars in Canada, teachers rolling TVs into classrooms, and people staying home from to watch. Canada stood still and breathless at the prospect of maybe finally this year getting one over on the Americans in the sport we are most likely to beat them in.

We lost in overtime and the nation mourned. Meanwhile south of the border, most of my friends didn’t even know there was a game on.

We are a small country, one tenth the population of the United States. We are in many ways the closest two nations in the world. But right now we are in a tough time and the appreciation of it is asymmetrical.

For the past year Canadians have been confronting existential questions about whether our country will have a future. The current US administration is a bully and a chaos merchant and seems comfortable ignoring well held norms of behaviour, partnership and legality. They are now openly declaring that law doesn’t matter at home or in international relations. This is terrifying.

The domestic chaos wrought by this state of affairs perhaps clouds Americans’ perception of what we are going through. Like the women’s Olympic hockey final what matters deeply to us seems like a mere passing thought to most.

Today in the Walrus, the headline writer went full bore: Canada is Already at War with the US — We Just Don’t Know It Yet

If we step outside the twenty-four-hour news cycle and try to make sense of the pattern in the longue durée, there is something more sinister that we appear to be missing.

At the level of rhetoric, Trump and his administration will continue to belittle us by calling us the fifty-first state, mocking our sovereignty (claiming Canada “lives because of the United States”), making false claims about the extent to which communist China holds influence over the federal government, even claiming they are going to somehow put an end to hockey. These insults and threats are designed to normalize a condition of enmity between the US and Canada. They are designed to delegitimize the idea of Canada. They are an absurdist denial of our independent statehood—on repeat—until it begins to ring true.

The rhetorical psy-ops have combined with a very real and targeted form of trade warfare designed to destabilize and ultimately cripple critical sectors of our economy, like auto manufacturing, aluminum, steel, and softwood lumber. This is the weaponization of interdependence. As the subordinate state in the continental hierarchy, Canada now finds itself in a very precarious position. We have been forced to rapidly attempt to eliminate our interprovincial trade barriers and diversify our global trading partnerships in order to unwind decades of increasing trade and investment interdependence with the US.

Beyond overt trade actions, the Trump administration has engaged in discussions with members of the Alberta Prosperity Project in an ongoing effort to coordinate the breakup of Confederation.

I’m just returning home from a week in the States working with kind, tired and frustrated people. My people. And still it seems very lonely. There is very little understanding and appreciation of what is happening north of the border. That’s understandable when a new secret police force is ransacking cities and disappearing people.

But spare us a thought. And if it might help, Have a word with your Congress members. There are many ways the US administration can, and is, setting back some of the great gains of history in the service of peace between nations. Throwing Canada-US relations on the dung heap would rank up there as among the dumbest.

I feel like we are not at war with Americans. But we might already be at war with the worst one ever to occupy the highest office.

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An old song about the war in the Gulf

March 5, 2026 By Chris Corrigan Uncategorized No Comments

I’ve just finished reading 100 Years of Solitude, Gabriel Garcia Marquez;s brilliant book about time and history set in a village and a family in Colombia. The central thesis of the book is that time is a circle.

Today I watch the war in the Gulf with the history of a person who was 25 when the US attacked Iraq in 1993. At that time Moxy Fruvous wrote a song, and it spoke to me then, and, as time is a circle, here it is again.

Gulf War Song

We got a call to write a song about the war in the Gulf, 
But we shouldn’t hurt anyone’s feelings. 
So we tried, and gave up, cuz there was no such song, 
But the trying was very revealing:

What makes a person so poisonous righteous, 
That they’d think less of anyone, who just disagrees? 
She’s just a pacifist, he’s just a patriot. 
If I said you were crazy, would you have to fight me?

Fighters for liberty, 
Fighters for power, 
Fighters for longer turns in the shower.

Don’t tell me I can’t fight ’cause I’ll punch out your lights 
And history seems to agree 
That I would fight you for me.

So we read, and we watched 
All the specially selected news, 
And we learned so much more about the good guys.

“Won’t you stand by the flag?” 
Was the question unasked, 
“Won’t you join in and fight with the allies?”

What could we say? We’re only 25 years old, 
With 25 sweet summers, and hot fires in the cold. 
This kind of life makes that violence unthinkable. 
We’d like to play hockey, have kids and grow old.

Fighters for Texaco, 
Fighters for power, 
Fighters for longer turns in the shower.

Don’t tell me I can’t fight ’cause I’ll punch out your lights, 
And history seems to agree 
That I would fight you for me, 
That us would fight them for we.

He’s just a peacenik, 
And she’s just a war-hawk. 
That’s where the beach was, 
That’s where the sea.

What could we say? We’re only 25 years old, 
And history seems to agree that I would fight you for me, 
That us would fight them for we. 
Is that how it always will be?

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Theory for practice 3: The ecology of dialogic containers and making change

March 4, 2026 By Chris Corrigan Art of Harvesting, Art of Hosting, Complexity, Containers, Conversation, Design, Emergence, Facilitation, Featured, Organization No Comments

The landscape dictates what is possible and what is not.

This is the third of a series on facilitation, dialogic containers and context. In it I want to develop a theory of context for facilitators on that explains not only how dialogic work succeeds, but why it sometimes cannot.

  • Part 1: Why theory matters for facilitation practice
  • Part 2: Holding space

Here’s the idea:

  • Dialogic containers are the scale at which humans experience the greatest immediate agency, but they exist inside larger contexts that determine whether that agency can produce lasting change.
  • The contexts have different scales with increasing stability and increasing time scales over which change happens, and that has implications for what we can do within any given facilitated dialogue.
  • Understanding these contexts helps us to design and host containers and processes that bring us the best possible chance of catalyzing bigger changes.

Introduction: Driving down the mountain with Adam Kahane

Back in November 2006 I attended an Art of Hosting gathering in the mountains above Boulder, Colorado which was unique in the hundreds of Art of Hosting events I’ve attended or led before or since. There were some important Art of Hosting stewards there alongside folks from the Authentic Leadership in Action Institute. There were a group of consultants from a new company called “Generon” which later became Reos. One of my fond memories of that event is singing “Me and Julio Down by the Schoolyard” with me on guitar and Adam Kahane giving his all on the choruses!

It was an important event because it brought together people who had many differences about what we felt the role of dialogue is in system change. Adam was working on the Power and Love polarity, and was very interested in the what happens if dialogue just becomes about love and good vibes while failing to address power in the room. Many of us in the Art of Hosting community were really doubling down on the relational and inner work we felt was necessary for change to happen. It was a swirling encounter of folks with a fierce commitment to practice, and a lot of experience, but a nascent understanding of what lay beyond our competencies.

It took my a while to unpack it, but Adam and I drove back to Denver airport together and we had a chance to talk about it with respect to some of the bigger work he was talking on with the Generon group. For Adam, I think everything was about how change can happen at meaningful scales where power keeps things in a certain way. Dialogic containers are lovely because we can create whatever we want inside of them, but Adam was challenging me not be naive about the reality that these experiences are embedded in a bigger context.

The question that haunts me

My work at the time was engaged with some big systemic issues including food systems, youth suicide and Indigenous child and family services, and I was working with people and organizations that had power and reach. The question that haunted me (and still does) was something like “Why can’t we get things to really change?” No one wants youth suicide, children being placed in unsafe care, food systems that poison people and planet. Of course the current set-up benefits people with power and money who are able to profit from it and keep it going. But still. Why was youth suicide not a thing we could change?

I landed on the idea of “community action systems” which was my way of trying to name the context that Adam was also speaking about. I wrote a long post about it. In that post, you can see my early orientation to good work in complexity: starting with what is, working to shift it and seeing what happens.

Twenty years after writing that post, I think the inquiry is still valid. But my study of complexity and my dedication to linking dialogue to change has given me some further insight. And so I offer this third post in a series about theory and facilitation on the ecology of dialogic containers.

Connecting facilitation practice to good theory

Good dialogue feels transformational. In a good and deep conversation, we learn something, we may have our opinions changed, or discover insights together that we have never seen before. We might have a part of identity slip away. We can find healing, beauty, joy, conflict, or coherence. Because the change happens right away, and often within and between, dialogue feels like it is the key to systemic change. “If this encounter can have such a profound affect on me right here,” the thinking goes, “imagine what would happen if we did this at scale?”

I like that thought. I clung to that thought for most of my professional life. I fervently believed that if we could just get the right people in the room and have the right conversations, the right things could happen. Some small victories validated this approach a bit, but like a stone dropped into still water, the ripples can be measured for a while – profoundly beautiful radiating waves of energy – but at some point, the lake absorbs the effort and the far shore never feels the effect.

A couple of decades of reflection and learning about complexity led me to Snowden’s work, where anthro-complexity is an attempt to build a coherent theory of the complexity of human life. Dave introduced me to Alicia Juarrero, whose most recent book, Context Changes Everything, is a critical text in creating a theory of stability, which I feel is critical to any theory of, or attempt to make, change. If you don’t understand how things remain stable and persistent over time, it’s very difficult to know where to affect change, let alone what to do once you are successful.

Through my love of football and my the work of Mark O Sullivan, I was introduced to ecological complexity, which is derived form the work of James Gibson and from which the idea of “affordances” comes. Ecological complexity says that actions are embedded in interconnected contexts and are enabled from the constraints and possibilities that define those contexts. All this is important to understand because if we want to understand why things are hard to change we need to look at the constraint regimes that keep them in place and find ways to discover the affordances for action. That points back to why Dave named one of his frameworks “cynefin”, one meaning of which is “habitat,” specifically a habitat that makes some things possible and not other things.

All of these folks work on this problem and their work is incredibly useful to dialogue practitioners and process designers. But in my world of facilitation I see hardly anyone connecting this body of work with facilitation and dialogue practice.

This matters because dialogic containers are places of the most active and intimate agency in groups of people. In dialogue we have maximum agency for change. We can create, occupy and exchange within dialogic containers at a very rapid place. A mind can change in a moment, a four-hour meeting can create new and powerful relationships through shared experiences. New ideas can be birthed. Creativity bubbles, possibility emerges.

Scales and tempos

No dialogic container is a neutral or a blank space. It is nested inside of and alongside of other contexts that influence it. These contexts exist at different scales and have different tempos. Change happens at a slower pace. There is much less creativity and possibility in a large bureaucratic system than there is in a small team. Communities trying to initiate a new way of delivering services, like harm reduction around drug use, must do so within a cultural framework that says “for example “drugs are bad.” Changing the cultural changes the possibilities for coherent ways of being, but changing a culture is hard.

In an ecological setting, a dialogical container is a lightly resourced structure that can create powerful change that acts upon its participants. This recent post on making beauty together talks about that. Constraints provide a downward causality, which is what Juarerro argues. So what are the contexts, scales and tempos that can influence dialogic containers? A useful list might be:

  • Dialogic containers
  • Situational settings
  • Institutional fields
  • Cultural fields

Let’s look at these in more detail.

Dialogic containers

Dialogic containers are the most agile and flexible scales. Spatially, people are directly encountering one another, whether face to face or online, and things happen in an instant. Conversations move along in minutes or hours, and decisions can be made, minds changed, conflicts inflamed or resolved in the blink of an eye. Think about the moment you said yes to a marriage proposal or a job offer or an invitation to something that changed your life. Dialogic containers are places where we practice our own agency, we have maximum freedom to act based on how we have made sense of things, and where change can occur immediately.

However, as the entire field of social psychology and cognitive science tells us, what I call dialogic containers themselves are constituted of context specific constraints which influence behaviour. Physical constraints are the most obvious, and all facilitators know that part of their job is creating space that is conducive to a meeting’s purpose. The nature of the space affects how people can organize, how well they are able to participate and how present they can be to the task at hand. Choices about room layout, light, size, temperature and colour all influence participants’ experiences.

Dialogic containers are also subject to internal constraints that enable the likelihood that some things will emerge and others will not. Facilitators and process designers have some influence in this space both in the moment and in the invitation process that helps bring people into the container. In my own practice of highly participatory work I find that it is very important to identify a shared necessity for participants that links with their intrinsic motivations to be present and contributing. The more we connect the meeting to urgent necessity of the moment, the more deeply participants invest in and participate in the process.

A plenary meeting is not the smallest way a group can of people can organize and engage. When groups break into sub-groups, multiple dialogic containers form, each subjected to the same kind of internal constraints that enable or limit participation. In dialogue facilitation, this technique is used deliberately to break up a field for many reasons. Sometimes we want to increase creativity or diversity for idea generation, or to disrupt unhelpful patterns like groupthink or a conversation that seems to be going around in circles.

Situational settings

Dialogic containers are set within a moment in time and a space that matters. Current events in the organization such as a recent conflict or structural change can influence the way a meeting goes. A strategic planning retreat is very different if the organization is riven with conflict than when everything is going well. Team culture can be influenced with a change in leadership, which is something we see all the time in sports. A group that has been together through struggles and celebrations will have a strong internal coherence that will be very different from a group coming together for the first time in unfamiliar territory. Situational awareness can still be rapidly changing contexts, on the scale of days or months, and they are the context that is most immediately influential to the group. Many times I have engaged in a long planning process that began when the situation was one way but by them time we met together “things had changed.” If one doesn’t adjust the nature of the dialogic container with situational awareness, “fit” become an issue. We will be doing the wrong thing for the wrong reason.

I once ran an Open Space meeting for a group of people who had been preparing to put to use a substantial pit of government funding organize a community health network. It took us a few months to craft the invitation and make sure everyone could come, and to prepare them to participate well in Open Space, including setting up ways that their work on the day could be put to use after the meeting. All was ready to go and people arrived and were excited to get to work on this opportunity. As I stood open to Open Space, the government representative whispered in my ear that the financial commitment had changed, but he didn’t want anyone to know about it. There was to be no money and he thought I should just invite the group to do the work anyway but not to mention that there would be no funding. I asked him to disclose that to the group and his response was “it’s not public yet.”

The fact was, it wasn’t a secret. Some of the participants knew this and others hadn’t and all were sworn to secrecy, so no one felt comfortable raising the issue. As I called for topics to be posted there was silence. Finally one of the group members stood up and said “I think we all need to talk about this and we like to ask our facilitator and government rep to leave the room while we do so.” I was relived and grateful. While my client and I waited outside the meeting room for a few hours we talked about the ethics of what had just happened and how the situation very much had a role to play in why this meeting was not going to go the way he wanted it to.

Dialogic containers do not arise in a vacuum. they are the product of an immediate situation that can change quickly and influence what will emerge in the container.

Institutional fields

Institutional fields represent a broader context in which dialogic containers function. Here we see that behaviours and possibilities are contained by things like policies, laws, decision making authority, incentives, resources and even persistence behavioural patterns like workload and job function. All of these constraints are helpful because they provide stability to institutions. This stability usually takes years to change, especially in established institutional settings like government, education systems, and large corporations. The stability is helpful because it protects the resources and, where applicable, the duty of care that institutions hold. Institutional fields make it very difficult for change to occur and become a deep source of frustration for facilitators who craft dialogic containers for innovation and change, only to see good ideas mire in the stability of the institutional field.

Oftentimes I will hear from leaders that they want highly participatory events that generate good leads but that we have to “manage expectations” in terms of what is possible. I get it because a good dialogic container can generate feelings of excitement and possibility and experiences of change but institutions may have something to say about how much and how fast things can go. This is why my process design conversations include an important check-in about the “architecture of implementation.” In other words, I want everyone to be clear on what we know about how the results of a meeting will be used. The worst leaders are the ones who want the group to feel fully empowered (“oh I want everyone to think freely and come up with great ideas they can champion”) but have no intention of opening up affordance within the organizations to make novel ideas take root.

This interface between dialogic containers in which change is generated, and institutional setting in which stability is maintained is a critical space for understanding change. The bigger results of work done in dialogic containers are subject to the affordances that are in place between that container and the instiututional field, and that often makes it hard for emergent strategy produced in a container to find an easy way into and institutional field. Change is almost always unanticipated and oblique to the established institutional fields.

In a recent Open Space I did with a tribal government, over two days a group of employees began to talk about instituting a four-day work week for the tribal government employees. This issue emerged during the meeting and the tribal CEO watched it happen. When they asked her is this was possible she answered honestly: “I don’t know.” But she alos committed to doing her best o make it happen which meant that she needed to take a well thought out proposal to the tribal council. In order to make it more likely to succeed, she told they group they would need to back their proposal with data and with examples from other tribal governments and anticipate the questions that different tribal council members would have.

Because there was no established affordance for the change, making the change was going to be a high effort endeavour. The institutional field needed to be shaped to make it easier to say yes if the proposal was to succeed. This is familiar to everyone who studies and practices politics and change, but understanding the relationship between the active change landscape of a dialogic containers and the active stability landscape of an institutional field using ecological concepts helps make this work clearer. How can we carve a deep channel that makes it easy for these two contexts to be linked? That what affordances are. If we can find some that are pre-established affordances, that’s helpful. If we need to create some, then it’s unlikely that our change work will be effective until we do, and that should influence the way we initiate work ion teh dialogic container by influencing who we invite, and what we talk about.

Cultural field

Institutional fields may be the most visible contexts in which dialogic containers exist, especially in discreet and well defined organizational settings, but cultural field are alos at play. In organizations “they way we’ve always done things” can be as important a constraint as a law or a policy. So too can professional cultures, social norms, cultural status and personal relationships. These can affect what is considered “knowledge” or “authority” in a cultural setting. A person that shows up to a public local government meeting with a slide show of charts and spreadsheets is trying to establish authority within a managerial culture that values these kinds of artifacts, regardless of of how accurate the knowledge is. A person at the same meeting with a true and personal story might be dismissed as merely anecdotal, even though the story may reveal more about the situation that data that has visualized in a socially acceptable way.

Organizational cultures evolve over years. They are not changed quickly and they are not changed predictably. Even longer are the societal cultures and norms that shape behaviours. Wittgenstein coined the term “form of life” to describe the collected shared background of a human community’s practices, activities and ways of doing things that are long established and context specific for a society or culture. Forms of life have a powerful effect on the way institutions are shaped (and the regulatory environment inside which they are shaped) and they provide an incredibly robust and persistent field that limits what affordances are possible.

In the world of global sport, we can see how forms of life affect how global association football is organized and trained differently in North America and Europe. North American professional sports are organized around closed leagues where there is no incentive NOT to finish last. This is becasue the teams are “franchises” of the league rather than individual organizations who have agreed to play each other in a league. In North American professional soccer, promotion and relegation is extremely are and only recently has emerged in the United Soccer League, a competing professional league to Major League Soccer. MLS will likely never have promotion and relegation because team owners buy their franchises as members of the top tier of soccer and protect their investments by always staying in a league that generates shared revenues across all the clubs.

The biggest scale of these contexts are the civilizational scales that take multiple generations to change. These contexts are the stable and unchanging seas in which all work takes place. A culture that is rooted in liberal economics, featuring capitalist and market-based structures of productivity and distribution will always treat shared ownership and reciprocal gifting as counter cultural, even at the smallest scale.

Implications of contexts for making change

There is a helpful polarity of change work I use, which I initially got from Snowden. A Robust system survives by resisting change and a resilient system survives by being changed. As we look at the different scales of contexts inside of which dialogic work occurs, we can see increasing robustness the wider the context is. The reason why cultural contexts are so enduring is that they a deeply embedded in values that produce structures that guide behaviours and thinking in a particular way. Proponents of the idea that humans have no free will point to these larger constraint regimes to point out that, essentially, no matter how strong you are as a swimmer or how much progress you are able to make against the current, the river will always carry you back downstream.

Importantly, the degree to which a context is robust tells you a lot about how it changes. Robust systems are incredibly resistant to change, but when they do change, it is often catastrophic to the existing order. That means whole scale breakdown of a robust system will often collapse into chaos. If a group of people inside these contexts do not have the resources to manage the chaos (including expertise, connection and resourcefulness) things can become perilous. On the other hand, resilient systems are generally composed of flexible and loosely content structures that change all the time in small ways. Watching a forest change into a marsh through beaver activity is amazing. At no time does the ecosystem suffer a catastrophic loss of life or diversity (as it would if was instantly flooded by a dam break). Instead the system gradually changes over time, with the life being supported largely by what happens at the edges, where different contexts meet. These are called “ecotones” in ecology and they provide fresh resources, refuges, places to incubate new life and diversity. In the natural world the ecotone is where new species and new adaptive capabilities are born. The same is true in human life where the ecotone introduces new ideas, new connections and requisite diversity to the system which can be carried back to the centre of the system to be explored and experimented with.

At the immediate level, making meaning together can help create the local conditions for improved lives and that is why we gather to figure out how to improve organizational life. Occasionally there exists an affordance in a system of contexts like this that allows for the larger contexts to change, sometimes quite rapidly. Thomas Kuhn famously analyzed this in his work on paradigm change in the natural sciences. Science is a special case as a context because it has an in-built mechanism for both preserving its stability and making wholesale change, even when that change can throw the entire careers of established scientists into the bin!

But in general, larger contexts dictate the kinds of things that are more likely to happen than not. These are affordances, and good strategy seeks to find and use these affordances, especially if the change we are trying to make is structural or systemic. Single meetings, or even extended gatherings of powerful dialogue will not succeed in making changes to the larger contexts unless affordances exist to do, or unless the group has the power to overwhelm the constraints of the bigger contexts.

What this means for facilitation

This theory has been important to my facilitation practice. For most of my career I have enlisted to host dialogues with the hope that bigger things might change. If a group does not have access to power and influence and the ability to make changes to the larger context, these gatherings can feel very buoyant and optimistic but the results very quickly hit “the real world.” that is not to say that dialogue has no power. Held with a knowledge of the contexts in mind, dialogic practice can live in the ecotone of a larger system, cultivating the possibility of change, creating new and surprising connections, or developing new collective knowledge that can have and influence and effect on a broader context.

Dialogic containers remain the places where we experience the most agency and the most authority over our actions and our futures. Done well, many participants leave good dialogues with a sense of possibility and connection. Harvested well, and realistically, dialogic work can become the crucible for new ideas and connections that can catalyst change. On its own, dialogue is rarely effective in influencing the broader contexts that keep problems in place. Working to discover affordances and blockages in the context, building an architecture that supports implementation, and developing a theory and strategy for preserving gains made suddenly makes the encounter in the dialogic container important, more high stakes and more effective.

As Juarrero says, context changes everything. Dialogic containers give us a place where agency is immediate and creativity is possible. But the wider contexts in which those containers sit determine whether the results of dialogue can travel beyond the room. The work of the facilitator is therefore not only to host good conversations, but to understand the landscapes of constraint in which those conversations take place.

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All seven Cynefin Co. frameworks

March 4, 2026 By Chris Corrigan Uncategorized No Comments

Cynefin is just one of seven frameworks used by the Cynefin Co. to understand and work with complexity. Here is the complete list at present, left here for posterity:

  • The Cynefin Framework
  • Estuarine Framework and Estuarine Mapping
  • Flexuous Curves Framework (originally Apex Predator) 
  • The Uncertainty Matrices – emphasise various forms and levels of knowability
  • 3 As, Agency, Affordance and Assemblage – critical tools for change
  • ASHEN – designed for KM, adopted for leadership and understanding organisations
  • AIMS – what you can manage in a complex system: Actants, Interactions, Monitors, and Scaffolding
  • The WRAS(SE) framework – it adds a critical human lens to the Cynefin ecosystem, helping organisations understand how people react under stress and ambiguity, and how those reactions shape outcomes, often more than formal plans or structures.

The links take you to the entries on Dave Snowden’s blog or to the Cynefin wiki, where methods and frameworks are developed and documented by practitioners.

This is from a page advertising a two day masterclass in these frameworks being held in London in March .

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