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The inundated delta

April 30, 2026 By Chris Corrigan Art of Harvesting, Art of Hosting, Complexity, Containers, Emergence, Facilitation, Featured No Comments

Over the past several weeks, Dave Snowden has been writing a very extensive series of long blog posts that serve as a watershed declaration of the state of his work thus far in the field of anthro-complexity. The posts both define what the field is and make sharp distinctions about what it isn’t, especially in relation to practices, ontologies, and theories that sit adjacent or close to it. I believe this represents a moment where Snowden is making a strong declaration about what anthro-complexity is, and being very deliberate about pulling it back from interpretations that seek to fit it into pre-existing understandings of complexity. Anthro-complexity is a new approach to complexity in human systems, and these posts are a strong statement of what that is.

In the course of these posts, Dave has focused in part on the Art of Hosting, among other approaches to working in complexity, and has named me explicitly as someone who has been trying to work within the field of the Art of Hosting to bring my own practice more in line with what I have been learning about anthro-complexity over the past 15 years or so, since I was introduced to Cynefin.

The entire series is very important to understand the context, and it is very long and dense stuff, but it’s important to understand some of the context. You can start the most recent series on the channel and the estuary here. For these posts I am going to write, I encourage you to read the two most direct posts about the Art of Hosting:

  • Stacy Unresolved
  • Leadership in the Estuary

These posts have helped me to reach an important moment in my own thinking, and I promised to respond to them personally and messily, so I’ll do my best here, probably in a series of posts. I am just heading out on a three-and-a-half-week walking holiday, so I’m not sure how much I’ll be able to get to, but long walks do offer a chance to ruminate.

So here is the first of what will likely be a number of posts on this topic.

First, thank you, Dave, for naming me, and for naming the Art of Hosting as a practice field, and for putting some deeply important questions to me and to us. These are questions that help guide and deepen our understanding of the field we work in. The Art of Hosting field is a broad one, spanning every continent, made up of people who arrive from many different traditions and levels of experience in the worlds of facilitation and change-making. Originally, the field was formed by folks moved by their experiences in social change, new metaphors of organizational leadership and systems change, and large-group facilitation methods. We are, and always have been, a community of practitioners first, and so the field has taken on the feel of a place where methods and tools are top of mind. I think the world sees the Art of Hosting as a collection of tools and practices for convening dialogue, and I don’t think that is incorrect. But it presents a problem that Snowden has identified, and it’s one we have to deal with.

The basic problem is this: while we use the language of emergence and complexity in the Art of Hosting, our use of methods and pre-designed processes, and our emphasis on “hosts,” means that we run the risk of not always being coherent with our own claims about emergence. Our approach to hosting conversations that matter certainly acknowledges emergence and can create conditions in which emergence happens, but it does that largely because humans operating in any constraint regime will create emergent outcomes. The question is whether that emergence is relevant to the field out of which these people come, or whether it is a distortion brought about by the container in which people are gathered and in which we convene conversation. A powerful conversation on its own is not helpful if its effects cannot survive contact with the system that it seeks to change.

The critique is important because it raises a question of epistemic justice, and I don’t think we answer that question very well: whose knowledge is being surfaced, and under what conditions? Are we enabling the distributed intelligence of the system to become visible, or are we shaping what can be said and heard through the design of our processes, invitations, and harvests?

If the conversations we convene are to truly matter, they must be coherent with the field in which they are situated. More than that, whatever emerges in those conversations must be able to travel back into that field and interact with it: shifting patterns, enabling action, and surviving beyond the temporary conditions of the container.

The issue, then, is not whether to convene, but how to do so in ways that remain accountable to the field. We need to be aware of the constraints we introduce, conscious of the power we hold as hosts, and attentive to whether what emerges is actually usable once people return to the systems they inhabit. And we need to be constantly critiquing our positionality.

Dave’s work lately has been to discuss systems as geological features. He locates the work of anthro-complexity firmly in the metaphor of the estuary, and yesterday his post very helpfully described the Art of Hosting (as a body of work) as a delta. These are two different kinds of systems, and the distinction is important. I want to quote from that post at length:

Art of Hosting is the delta of the leadership and organisational field. Over two decades and across dozens of cultural contexts, Toke Møller, Monica Nissen, and the community they built have produced real moments of collective intelligence, genuine emergence, and authentic contact. The practice carries real generosity and real craft, and this post takes that seriously.

But the delta has been building. The hosting aesthetic, the circle, the open space, the world café, the council, the harvest: these are now a recognisable repertoire, instantly legible to anyone who has spent time in that world. And a repertoire is a structure that precedes the encounter. The hosting team designs the invitation, shapes the container, holds the process, and harvests the outputs. The circle looks leaderless. The architecture is not.

Chris Corrigan, who has engaged generously with this argument in previous conversations and stated plainly that he is trying to change Art of Hosting from within, deserves acknowledgement here. That is the most intellectually honest position available to a practitioner committed to a tradition they have also diagnosed. It is exactly the move Griffin made with Stacey and the matrix: following the argument toward its conclusion, regardless of the professional cost. The question is whether the tradition as a whole is willing to follow that argument, or whether the delta will continue to accumulate.

The delta’s generativity is real. The flood plain moments, the occasions when Art of Hosting breaks through its own container and something genuinely distributed happens, are not accidental. They are what the tradition has been reaching for, and they occur. The problem is that the method cannot reliably produce them, cannot fully explain when they occur, and cannot sustain them when they do. The hosting team is still in the room. The design is still prior. The harvest is still shaped by hands that arrived before the conversation began.

In order to fairly deal with this critique we must honestly look at the ways in which it is true. And so to all my friends and colleagues in this field, I invite you and us to find the genuine questions in here that help us deepen our practice and rise to the challenge posed by serious questions of epistemic justice, legitimate change, and a deeper understanding of complexity and its dynamics.

My experience of reading Dave’s posts lately has been at times feeling a bit defensive but on the whole (and especially after yesterday’s) more akin to what a delta might feel during and after an autumn king tide, when it is overwhelmed and inundated by the sea and the rain. When the deluge stops and the tide ebbs, one finds that the landscape has been gently rearranged and new patterns of flow and precarious stability arise. I find myself in somewhat familiar location, but standing on new ground and needing to re-navigate and re-orient myself and my practice. I genuine experience of estuarine thinking. As I have been doing so over the past few days (during which I was also co-leading an Art of Hosting training) I found myself operating with heightened curiosity and inquiry.

I’ll write more about these questions, and especially as they relate specifically to how I understand the practice of the Art of Hosting, the usefulness of methods (including harvest), the importance of dialogic containers and how anthro-complexity helps us make better change. Stay tuned, and enjoy the view.

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Control, facilitation, and the Golden Rule

April 28, 2026 By Chris Corrigan Art of Hosting, Chaordic design, Complexity, Containers, Facilitation, Featured No Comments

We are just about to begin Day Two of our bi-annual Art of Hosting here in Vancouver. Yesterday, we introduced participants to the four-fold practice of the art of hosting (presence, participation, hosting and co-creation) as a generative framework for designing participatory meeting and supporting participatory leadership, and we also taught the Chaordic Path, as a way into confronting the dynamics of self-organization in meetings.

This teaching in particular is a bit of a gateway into complexity theory, as it is intended to help participants confront issues of control and self-organization in facilitation and leadership. For many people coming to the practice of hosting, where we place an emphasis on working with constraints rather than intervening in events, the idea that groups of people can be self-organizing within constraints is sometimes a challenging notion. The idea that we might design dialogic containers thoughtfully to encourage work that is useful, rich, affirming, novel, and full of diversity, difference and novelty is desired, but is tricky in practice.

For me, the dance of chaos and order and the confrontation with the potential of self-organization I found in Open Space in 1995 was mind blowing. It transformed my facilitation practice from being a person whose job was to control conversations, make sure that they “stayed on track” and “dealt with” conflict. My job had been to reframe people’s words and help people listen to each other and write longs lists of things on flip charts. That’s okay I suppose in a communications workshop, but in meetings? Hmm.

At the same time as I had been facilitating groups that way I hated being facilitated in this way. I didn’t want someone reframing things I was saying. I didn’t want differences mediated between myself and another person; I wanted to work those out together. I didn’t need someone else to tell me to listen to another person with curiosity. And if something was to go up on a flip chart, I needed it to be in my own words, especially if the facilitator working with us didn’t know anything about the context they were working in.

After 30 years of hosting conversations very differently, I still get clients calling me to facilitate conversations by, essentially, inserting myself into a set of human dynamics that they are unable or unwilling to participate in. It is not the folks that are excluded or unheard in organizational or community dynamics that are calling me. It is often folks whose agendas are not finding a fast enough route to implementation because there is resistance in the field.

My work is often to help those folks discover what is actually happening. This resistance is information and it tells us a lot about what is possible and what isn’t. Running roughshod over resistance is possible, but unethical. Exploring the nature of the field of relations is a pre-requisite to discovering the affordances for action.

(I once had an employer group contact me to see if I could facilitate the employers’ agenda regarding labour relations issues becasue the unions they worked with were always being unreasonable. When I asked to call the union reps to talk about the issue they told me that wasn’t part of the work and they simply needed me to find a way to get the union to back off their demands and grievances and forward to employers’ agenda. Of course I declined the offer to work with them).

Perhaps it goes without saying, but I think there are a lot of implicit actions of control built into the unexamined role of the facilitator. When folks ask me to deal with difficult people as if I have some magic wand, I’ll often ask them “how would you like to be treated if someone didn’t like what you had to say?” I think in general, most folks are not in favour of being controlled by others, but there is some residual idea out there that facilitation or leadership comes with permission to control conversations, conflict, and dissent. It can be a useful practice for those of us who lead or work with groups to reflect on these questions.

Enabling self-organization and co-creation of a container that can hold conflict is the better – and harder – way. But a group that learns to work with difference and hold conflict generatively while also dealing with harm in a relational way is a resilient group. It becomes a group that can host itself and that doesn’t require a facilitator at all.

To paraphrase Derrida, “the moment of facilitation is a moment of madness.”

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Colonization today

April 28, 2026 By Chris Corrigan Democracy No Comments

The leadership candidates for the Conservative Party of BC vow to roll back indigenous rights and stop returning land to First Nations. and also object to being called colonizers, which begs the question about what they think colonization is.

Billionaires are colonizing our skies. If you think this is bad, the night skies will soon be populated with a million Starlink satellites and thousands more from other companies and nations. And it gets worse as there are companies like Reflect Orbital prepared to launch satellite grids that will reflect sunlight to the night side of Earth to power solar arrays 24/7. Follow Sam Lawler for more.

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At the football last night

April 23, 2026 By Chris Corrigan Football, Uncategorized No Comments

TSS Rovers Men 0 – 1 Langley United Men

TSS Rovers Women 1 – 2 Langley United Women

Our BC Premier League season continues to rocket out of the gate with our fourth matches of 14, and the first ones at our iconic home, Swangard Stadium. This was always set to be a spicy battle, because the Langley men’s team pipped us to the title last year on the last kick of the season, a 90+5′ penalty against the Whitecaps Academy that saw them claim three points in the final game, beating us by one. As a club, our men’s teams have had a few last minute heartbreaks over the years, including losing on penalties to Pacific FC after a last minute goal tied the quarter final of the 2023 Canadian Championship, losing the title to Highlanders on the last kick of the 2023 season and last year’s debacle. We’ve alos won a trophy on penalties so, well, karma has its way with us I suppose.

But the Langley men’s team is no mere rival. They dressed six of our former players, including Niko Papakyiakopolous, Ivan Meija, Tristan Otoumagie, Kyle Jones, Dominic Di Paola and former captain and club legend Connor MacMillian. Their head coach is our former assistant coach Azad Palani. This made for a weird vibe, and very few of us were not happy with the jumping of the ship that happened by our former players, even though the dazzled us several times. Thankfully none of them scored.

Langley have started the season strongly with nine goals and two clean sheets against the two worst teams in the league. So while we are finding our feet with a very new squad of players harvested from try outs and loans and our academy, they were starting strong and getting ready for a game against Vancouver FC in the Voyageurs Cup. We knew we were better than Nanaimo and Kamloops, and indeed we held them for 90 minutes to a 0-0 deadlock, thanks in part to some great saves from Cal Weir, three hit goal posts and no thanks to some squandered chances from our strikers.

But the twist was in the tail. After a hard fought game, Rovers were called for a penalty in added time and at 90+2, we fell yet again to this side that we are developing a serious dislike towards.

Our motto at Rovers is “we never want to see you again” which is about helping our players move on to professional careers. We don;t mean “join a rival and come back home and win on a late penalty.” Arg.

The women’s game was a different affair, even though our former women’s head coach is Chelsey Hannesson who is now in her second year coaching Langley. She hates to lose. And she hates to lose to us.

A couple of defensive gaffs from our women sealed this one for Langley. We ended up on the wrong end of a 2-1 result, but Langley will certainly feel like they stole a couple of points. A chipped goal from our striker Sophia Kramer cut the lead, but we couldn’t find more. However, we were brilliant on the ball. Our women’s teams plays an incredibly well drilled possession game, passing to explore and find openings, moving into invisible channels and really controlling the game. Our midfield consists of Sofia Faremo and Katie Bishop, two veterans who read each other’s minds and both of whom are capable of long distance strikes. Our backline is anchored by Sophie Campbell who I will not be surprised if she turns professional. She is calm, cool and collected at the back. We didn’t get the result, but it was a joy to watch, and a pleasure to be back home at Swangard Stadium, on the best pitch in the province.

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Earth Day

April 22, 2026 By Chris Corrigan Uncategorized No Comments

The photo above is an astonishing reflection of the triple arch of the Milky Way and our solar system.

I LOVE LOVE LOVE Hank Green’s gentle awe as he reflects on the photos returned from the Artemis crew. Enjoy this video.

Remembering Norma Bailey’s floating store at Hot Springs Cove in Clayoquot Sound. I visited that place in 1989, the first time I ever came to this coast.

Animals share signals across space.

Just a few beautiful things from this little planet that is doing its best despite us letting it down.

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