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Getting to Maybe: How the World is Changed
by Frances Westley, Brenda Zimmerman and Michael Quinn Patton

Toronto: Random House Canada, 2006

Most of us have a deep desire to make the world around us a better place. But we tend to think that great social change is the province of heroes -- an intimidating view of reality that keeps ordinary people on the coach. The trick is any great social project -- from the global fight against AIDS to working to eradicate poverty in a single Canadian city -- is to stop looking at the discrete elements and start trying to understand the complex relationships between them. By studying fascinating real-life examples of social change through this systems-and-relationships lens, the authors of Getting to Maybe tease out the rules of engagement between volunteers, leaders, organizations and circumstance -- between individuals and what Shakespeare called "the tide in the affairs of men."

Getting To Maybe applies the insights of complexity theory and harvests the experiences of a wide range of people and organizations -- including the ministers behind the Boston Miracle; the Grameen Bank, in which one man’s dream of micro-credit sparked a financial revolution for the world’s poor; the efforts of a Canadian clothing designer to help transform the lives of aboriginal women and children; and many more -- to lay out a brand new way of thinking about making change in circumstances, in business, and in the world.

Frances Westley has published widely in the area of strategic change and visionary leadership, and led the Dupont Canada-fostered think-tank on social innovation, based at McGill University’s Desautel Faculty of Management, where many of the ideas for this book were developed.

Brenda Zimmerman, a professor at the Schulich School of Business at York University, has been studying and writing for twenty years about how complexity theory applies to organizations.

Michael Quinn Patton is an independent organizational development consultant and has written five major books on the art and science of program evaluation.

 

 
   
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