June 6 – 10, 2011
Eve Mitleton-Kelly
This course is open for bookings.
During this course participants will learn some key principles of complexity theory and explore how they can be applied in organisations. Through this work participants will address how to build sustainability on different scales, from workplace and community settings to global issues.
In order to take informed action to facilitate resilience and long-term sustainability, it is vital that one understands the interdependence, interconnectivity and co-evolution of complex human and ecological systems. During this course, participants will learn how to understand organisations as complex social systems within a social ecosystem. This will enable them to work with and apply principles of complexity in their own workplaces or communities with remarkable results.
The group will engage with the ten principles of complexity theory and discuss practical examples that illustrate these principles. They will then use real-life case studies to demonstrate different models of organisation and leadership and to explore how different ‘enabling environments’ can promote or hinder sustainability.
Throughout the course, participants will work in small groups to explore practical challenges and reflect together on why they appear intractable and how a complexity perspective can address them more successfully.
Previous knowledge of complexity theory is NOT required and the course does not include any mathematics.
Prof. Eve Mitleton-Kelly is Director of the Complexity Research Programme at the London School of Economics and visiting Professor at the Open University. She was Executive Coodinator of the Society for Organisational Learning-London from 1977-2008, and has been Policy Advisor to European and USA organisations, the European Commission, and several UK Government Departments. Her research has concentrated on addressing apparently intractable problems in business and the public sector and the creation of enabling environments based on complexity science. She has developed a theory of complex social systems and a methodology to address complex social problems which is being used for teaching at universities around the world. Publications and the work of the LSE Complexity Group is at http://www.lse.ac.uk/complexity
£750
All course fees include accommodation, food, field trips and all teaching sessions.
For further information about Schumacher College please see About the College
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