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A new definition of anthro-complexity

March 13, 2026 By Chris Corrigan Art of Hosting, Complexity, Containers, Featured No Comments

Participants in a meeting of the Japanese OD Network self-organizing in a dialogic container to discuss what they learning from an embodied experience of constraints, Kanzan University, Nagoya, 2019

Dave Snowden is publishing a TON of stuff these last few weeks, much of densely theoretical and full of references to thinkers and traditions that would probably take years to properly unpack. Nevertheless I appreciate these posts because “anthro-complexity” – the name he has given to his body of work – has been the most influential body of theory in helping me to think through the ideas of dialogic containers, hosting, sense-making, and leadership.

What has been missing from his work is a clear definition of anthro-complexity. I have described it as “the complexity of human systems” as a short-hand way of differentiating it from other ways of thinking about complexity. At any rate, Dave took a crack at a provisional definition this week:

Anthro-complexity holds that human complex adaptive systems are part of the natural world and embedded within it, while being irreducibly different from other natural systems in ways that matter for how we understand and intervene in them. Their agents have intelligence, identity, and intention: a reflexive capacity enacted in language, relationship, and cultural practice rather than located in any bounded interior; a sense of self always constituted in interaction with others, shaped by history, narrative, and cultural membership, and never fully available to conscious inspection; and the ability to act toward imagined futures in ways that alter the very conditions being acted upon. These are not complications to be managed but constitutive features of the system. Meaning does not simply emerge; it is enacted through embodied experience, narrative, and distributed social interaction, and it is always path-dependent, culturally situated, and shaped by history that cannot be undone.

This shifts the practitioner’s question. Not what this system is for, but what it is doing and what is becoming possible or impossible within it.  Not “what should this system become?” but “what are the energy gradients, what can be shifted and what cannot, and what micro-interventions change the conditions under which different futures become available?” The role is not to design outcomes but to attend to what is already emergent, to read the terrain: what flows, what resists, what the material, the skills, the habits, the experience and the natural evolved talent  (in other words, the craft) affords; and to intervene with and through the natural grain of how meaning actually forms rather than imposing frameworks from outside.

I like this for a number of reasons:

  • The embedded nature of human systems means that we have to take into consideration the many contexts in which they are embedded and to which they are related.
  • Meaning is both emergent and enacted, which means that people are making and enacting meaning alongside the emergence and enactment of the system. And as they do so they influence the system in different ways.
  • Dave’s “practitioner’s question” is one that I too am trying to address. Yes to not designing outcomes. Yes also to attending to what I call (borrowing from Juarerro) the constraint regimes at play, which shape emergence, affordances, flows, exchanges, boundaries. attractors, connectors and identities.
  • And furthermore, I agree strongly that the practitioners’s role is not imposition of frameworks or methods. In my practice I see methods as something I might call constraint-craft.

My own exploration of this world uses the term “host” for this work, as it connects to participatory practice in the Art of Hosting community and takes the emphasis off of the action of “facilitation” which essentially means “to make things easy.” I don’t do that. I design and offer scaffolding for experiences to for participants and groups to be together making sense of the work in order to act. And a lot of my writing here has been in-the-public thinking through of this problem of “facilitator as a person with an outsized profile” and “facilitator as a person who uses that power and trust to immediately vacate the field for participants to get to work.”

So I appreciate this definition and Dave’s continued clarity on these topics both as a way to clarify what we are actually talking about and as a set of ideas from which we can truly critique facilitation while also building up a role of host as complexity practitioner who crafts with constraints to enable meaning and action through and understanding of emergence, interaction and affordances. I think I have one more post in me on the series on theory that I have been writing (part 1, part 2, part 3) and it will be about the role and craft of the practitioner, the host, the person who builds the scaffolding of constraints, and what that craft looks like and what pitfalls we have to avoid.

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Spots still open for our Art of Hosting April 27-29

March 11, 2026 By Chris Corrigan Art of Hosting No Comments

Back in 1995 I came across Open Space Technology, in a huge conference in Whistler, where 400 people were exploring public participation practice. Witnessing the facilitators hosting this event was game changing for my facilitation practice. After years of being the “sage on the stage” and standing at the front of a room with a flip chart marker in my hand reframing participant’s words, I finally saw what facilitation could be if it was in service of enabling self-organization in groups. It set me on a life-long journey to develop my practice of participatory process.

That journey coincided with my own learning about complexity and self-organization in the natural world, reading Capra and Maturana, and Gleick and later, Snowden, Eoyang, and others. In 2003 I encountered the Art of Hosting community for the first time, where I met other people who were asking the same questions as I was about the role of facilitation, the ways in which it gets in the way of groups doing their own work and what stance we could take that would enable people in groups and organizations to work together on their stickiest challenges. We were disrupting traditional notions of facilitation and organizational development and building a body of work that spanned many disciplines and an eclectic set of approaches.

Every year since 2004, along with some of our dearest colleagues, we have offered at least one, and many years two, Art of Hosting trainings here in the Vancouver region, inviting people from all over the world to join us. Next month we will welcome folks for our 27th local Art of Hosting and we have a few spots left to fill. April 27-29 we will gather at the historic Heritage Hall in Vancouver, a City-owned public space, to talk and learn about how participatory methods, leadership, and design can help unstick groups and organizations who are confronting complex challenges.

We’d love to have you join us. Learn more at the website, where you can also register right away.

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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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