The Emergence of ABCD in Australia and the Asia Pacific

The  Emergence  of  ABCD  in  Australia  and   the  Asia  Pacific   • • Posted  by  Dee  Brooks  on  May  25,  2015  at  5:30pm   View  Blog   The  E...
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The  Emergence  of  ABCD  in  Australia  and   the  Asia  Pacific   • •

Posted  by  Dee  Brooks  on  May  25,  2015  at  5:30pm   View  Blog   The  Emergence  of  ABCD  in  Australia  and  the  Asia  Pacific   by  ABCD  Asia  Pacific  co-­‐founders  and  members  

  This  is  the  story  that  involves  many  people,  over  many  years,  and  it  tells  us  of  their  work   and  the  emergence  of  the  language  and  the  principles  of  Asset-­‐based  Community   Development  (ABCD)  in  Australia  and  some  of  its’  Asian  neighbours.  The  compilation  of   this  story  is  a  collective  effort  and  we  have  reflected  on  the  adaption  and  adoption  of   the  ABCD  approach  in  the  communities  in  which  we  live  and  work.   Since  the  1970s,  Peter  Kenyon,  Bank  of  IDEAS,  Australia  has  delivered  and  facilitated   work,  undertaken  consultancies  at  a  local,  national  &  international  levels  focusing  on   small  communities  revitalisation  and  working  with  the  positive  attributes  of  young   people.  Peter’s  enormous  contribution  has  lead  to  policy  and  program  development  in   many  countries  around  the  world  and  he  has  facilitated  hundreds  of  training  and  events   with  thousands  of  people  around  the  world.  Some  of  Peter’s  work  includes  training   courses  with  local  governments  and  communities  throughout  New  Zealand,  technical   advisor  and  trainer  in  rural  Malaysia,  community  strategic  planning  throughout  

Australia,  co-­‐facilitation  with  Jody  Kretzmann  including  training  and  events  in  the  USA   and  presentations  and  workshops  across  Canada  –  just  to  name  a  few!  

Although,  Peter  will  be  the  first  one   to  tell  you  that  he  did  not  start  the  revolution  as  in  many  ways  the  assets  approach  has   seemed  to  be  a  natural  way  of  operating  for  some  people.  Focusing  on  strengths  and   not  the  deficits  has  brought  about  a  sense  of  creativity  and  positive  approach  in   communities,  as  Peter  explains,   Kretzmann  and  McKnight  brought  sharp  focus  and  comparison  –  their  contribution  was   that  they  introduced  the  analogy  of  the  half  full/empty  glass  and  introduced  the  concept   of  having  an  asset  map  rather  than  the  needs  map  –  it  was  not  about  the  audit  of  things,   it  was  about  relationships.   In  reflection  of  the  history  of  working  from  an  assets  perspective,  Peter,  who  has  strong   links  with  the  ABCD  Institute  in  Chicago  and  is  an  Associate  Member  of  the  ABCD  Faculty   says,   Moses  Coady  was  talking  about  this  in  the  1920’s  and  the  1930’s,  and  he  probably   wasn’t  the  first!”  The  book,  “Makers  of  Our  Own  Destiny”  by  Moses  Coady  was  focused   in  getting  people  to  think  about  their  strengths  and  resources  but  he  didn’t  use  the  word   assets.   Apart  from  Peter,  many  Australian  organisations,  such  as;  St  Luke’s  Innovative   Resources,  Bendigo,  Victoria,  Inclusion  Works,  Townsville,  Queensland,  Lighthouse   Resources  in  Brisbane,  Queensland,  and  the  Family  Action  Centre  (FAC)  at  the  University   of  Newcastle,  New  South  Wales,  were  using  what  we  now  call  the  strengths-­‐based   approach  in  the  1990’s.    By  the  time  the  language,  framework  and  tools  of  Asset-­‐based   Community  Development  hit  our  shores  in  the  same  decade  it  felt  somewhat  of  a   natural  progression  to  incorporate  ABCD,  in  order  to  deepen  the  work  that  was  well   underway.    Over  time,  many  other  organisations  and  communities  increased  their  work   in  strengths-­‐based  practices  across  Australia  and  New  Zealand.  This  emerging  way  of  

working  with  families  and  communities  proved  to  be  powerful  but  the  approach  was  not   yet  mainstream.   At  an  institutional  level,  and  with  the  support  and  guidance  of  Dr  Jenny  Cameron,  the   Latrobe  Valley  Community  Environmental  Gardens  (LVCEG)  and  Santa’s  Workshop  were   two  of  the  first  documented  ABCD  projects  in  Australia.    Started  in  1999  as  part  of  the   Community  Partnering  Project,  these  were  joint  action  research  projects  between   Latrobe  City  Council  and  Monash  University  that  used  ABCD  to  initiate  community  and   economic  development  projects.  More  information  can  be  found  at  the  Community   Economies  website.  

  St  Luke’s  Innovative  Resources  is  an  Australian  not-­‐for-­‐profit  publishing  house  that  has   created  original  conversation-­‐building  tools  for  over  20  years.    ABCD  has  always   provided  a  framework  that  reminds  us  all  of  the  importance  of  noticing,  mobilizing  and   celebrating  strengths,  rather  than  deficits,  possibilities  rather  than  constraints  and   solutions  rather  than  problems.  When  asked  for  his  first  recollection  of  ABCD  in   Australia,  Russell  Deal  of  Innovative  Resources  at  St  Luke’s  says,   It  was  the  late  1980’s  and  into  the  early  1990’s  that  we  seemed  to  be  flooded  with   curiosity  about  ‘post-­‐modern’  approaches  –  solution  focused,  narrative,  intensive  family   services  and  community  building  approaches  and  we  had  Bliss  Brown  [Imagine  Chicago]   visit  in  the  early  1990’s.    My  memory  suggests  that  this  was  when  we  first  became  aware   of  ABCD.   Russell  also  says  that  as  much  as  anything,  a  community  is  defined  and  shaped  by  its   conversations.    It  is  not  the  numbers  of  conversations  that  count  rather  it  is  the   inclusion  of  all  voices  in  a  respectful  way  that  leads  to  the  realization  of  ‘best  hopes’  for   everyone.  

 

 

ABCD  is  aspirational.  It  is  about  the  journey,  not  prescribed  destinations.  Innovative   Resources  is  continually  searching  for  ways  to  bring  the  values  and  perspectives  of  ABCD   alive  through  hands-­‐on  tools  that  can  help  build  transformational  conversations  -­‐  about   gender  equity,  environmental  sustainability,  leadership,  values,  fairness  and  long  may   Innovative  Resources  and  ABCD  continue  to  evolve.  Russell  explains,   By  the  time  St  Luke’s  Strength  Approach  was  initially  articulated  around  1995  ABCD   thinking  was  embedded  as  a  core  component.   Innovative  Resources  began  publishing  in  1992  and  again  ABCD  was  the  macro   community  oriented  strengths  model  we  used  to  complement  the  therapeutic  models   that  inspired  our  conversation  building  card  sets.   The  evolution  of  ABCD  and  in  particular  its’  significant  and  challenging  influence  in  the   area  of  disability  evolved  after  a  brief  visit  to  Australia  by  John  McKnight.  John’s  3  hour   presentation  at  Victoria  College  in  early  December,  1988  on  “The  Nature  of  Community   Life”  was  the  foundation  for  further  development  over  many  years.  

 

Ric  Thompson  recalled  the  significant  impact  and  common  sense  of  the  principles  and   practice  of  ABCD  shared  that  day.  Ric’s  work  to  this  day,  26  years  later,  remains  heavily   entrenched  and  influenced  by  this  3  hour  exchange.  The  co-­‐designing  of  a  community   building  agency  called  InoRec,  later  named  Inclusion  Works,  was  established  in  1991  and   was  solely  built  around  the  principles  and  practice  of  ABCD.  Ric  reflects,   Inclusion  Works,  in  partnership  with  the  extensive  assets  of  the  City  of  Townsville,  have   called  upon  the  gifts,  talents  and  contributions  of  all  citizens,  resulting  in  the  building  of   a  better  community.    Consequently,  Inclusion  Works  has  facilitated  ABCD  training  events  nationwide,  sharing   the  wisdom  of  John  McKnight,  Sandra  Nahornoff,  Jody  Kretzmann,  Peter  Kenyon,  Ted   Smeaton  and  Mike  Green.  Our  communities  have  become  better  communities  as  a   result  of  the  collective  efforts  of  a  shared  vision  by  all  those  involved  over  the  years.   In  2001,  Jody  Kretzmann  from  the  ABCD  Institute  was  invited,  by  the  Family  Action   Centre  (FAC),  University  of  Newcastle,  to  attend  and  present  at  the  2nd  Building  Family   and  Community  Strengths  Conference  in  Newcastle,  New  South  Wales.    The  Family  Action  Centre  thought  it  was  important  for  policy  and  funding  to  reflect  an   ABCD  approach  that  was  being  evidenced  in  practice,  so  meetings  were  arranged  for   Jody  Kretzmann  with  Federal  and  State  bureaucrats  from  various  Departments  of  Family   and  Community  Services  in  Canberra  and  Sydney.    Judi  Geggie,  past  Director  of  the  FAC   reflects,    Universities  in  Australia  have  increasingly  focused  on  their  community  engagement   roles  and  the  University  of  Newcastle,  through  their  Faculty  of  Health's  support  of  the   Family  Action  Centre,  has  shown  how  institutions  can  support  health  and  well  being   through  the  promotion  of,  advocacy  and  training  in  the  ABCD  approach  to  community   revitalisation  at  a  local,  regional  and  national  level.      

 

 

The  original  5  assets,  identified  by  John  McKnight  and  Jody  Kretzmann,  were  an   excellent  base  to  start  from  and  by  2001  the  6th  asset  of  ‘stories,  heritage,  local  identity   and  values’  was  formally  introduced  by  Peter  Kenyon  (Bank  of  IDEAS)  and  David  Wilson   (Heritage  Futures  International).  This  additional  asset  made  sense  to  practitioners  and   was  readily  adopted  by  Australian  and  New  Zealand  practitioners.   This  addition  of  the  6th  asset  of  ‘heritage  and  culture’  occurred  as  a  result  of  David   Wilson  first  hearing  of  ABCD,  which  he  incorporated  into  his  work  in  2001  in  the  town  of   Oamaru  New  Zealand.  Oamaru  had  started  on  its  community  and  economic   development  path  in  1985  during  a  severe  drought  and  record  unemployment.  It   identified  the  town’s  original  business  district  of  19th  century  buildings  as  being  worthy   of  restoration  for  tourism,  business  and  economic  development.  The  ABCD  framework   helped  pull  everything  together  then,  and  continues  to  this  day.   Now  all  buildings  are  tenanted  with  a  variety  of  creative  enterprises  and  a  calendar  of   arts  and  cultural  events  throughout  the  year  including  the  NZ  National  Penny  Farthing  &   Veteran  Cycle  Championships.  David  explains,   A  community’s  revived  cultural  identity  and  expression  expands  individual  capacities,  is   key  and  core  to  what  makes  a  community  a  unique  and  great  place  to  live,  is  important   for  people’s  sense  of  self  and  how  they  relate  to  others,  gives  feelings  of  belonging  and   security,  can  help  break  down  barriers,  builds  a  sense  of  trust  between  people,  and  is   fundamental  to  a  vibrant  and  healthy  society.  A  strong  sense  of  cultural  identity  also   contributes  positively  to  employment,  economic  growth,  environmental  sustainability,   social  cohesion,  the  acceptance  and  encouragement  of  diversity,  and  creative  thinking.  

  Due  to  the  growing  interest  from  Australian  Departments,  at  a  State  and  Federal  level,   in  2002,  the  FAC,  University  of  Newcastle  organised  for  Jody  Kretzmann  to  return  to   Australia  to  provide  training  and  hold  discussions  with  government  departments  in   Sydney,  Canberra  and  Newcastle.    The  FAC  developed  a  partnership  with  the  ABCD   Institute  and  commenced  distributing  the  ABCD  Institute’s  workbooks  and  delivering   ABCD  training  within  Australia.   The  National  Family  and  Community  Strengths  Conferences  organised  by  the  FAC   biannually  continued  to  support  the  work  on  the  ground  through  the  sharing  of  stories   and  in  2005  the  Inaugural  Australian  ABCD  Conference  was  held  in  order  to  increase  the   focus  on  this  approach  to  revitalising  communities.   Jody  Kretzmann  continued  to  return  to  Australia  each  year  to  support  the  efforts  of  the   Australian  trainers  and  consultants  to  promote  the  adoption  of  this  approach  at  a  policy   and  practice  level.  Dee  Brooks,  FAC,  who  was  working  in  the  field  of  Youth  Work  before   joining  the  FAC  reflects,   When  I  first  discovered  ABCD,  I  realised  that  this  is  how  I  had  always  worked;  focusing  on   the  strengths  of  young  people  and  community,  and  now,  I  had  a  framework  to  support   my  efforts  and  a  heap  of  extra  tools,  resources  and  networks.  It  felt  like  the  natural  place  

to  focus  my  energies;  it  felt  like  coming  home!  It  was  fortuitous  that  I  landed  in  the   middle  of  the  ABCD  hype  in  Australia  with  the  FAC  and  now,  I  can’t  imagine  working  any   other  way.  

     

  Two  people  who  were  strongly  influenced  by  Jody  Kretzmann  were  Ted  Smeaton  and   Amanda  Howard  who  travelled  to  Northern  America  to  see  first  hand  the  work  in  action.   When  they  returned  they  set  up  the  Central  Coast  ABCD  Network,  which  incorporated   the  Central  Coast  Community  Congress.  Formally  established  in  2000,  this  network   became  a  great  support  to  local  service  providers  and  local  government  to  share  stories   and  to  promote  the  approach  when  working  with  communities  and  individuals.   In  2005,  at  a  policy  level,  the  Federal  Department  of  Community  Services  developed  a   strategy,  which  they  called  The  Stronger  Families  &  Communities  Strategy  (SFCS).    The   key  focus  was  to  build  stronger  communities  for  the  benefit  of  children  and  their   families.  The  Communities  for  Children  model  used  many  of  the  principles  of  ABCD  with   the  local  community  making  decisions  about  the  allocation  of  resources.  

Since  2005,  Chris  Dureau  of  Matrix  Consulting  has  introduced  ABCD  and  other  strength   based  thinking  in  country  programs  through  the  Australian  Development  Program  in  the   following  areas:   • • •

Pacific:    Papua  New  Guinea,  Solomon  Islands,  Vanuatu,  and  Samoa   Asia:  Timor-­‐Leste,  Indonesia,  Thailand,  Vietnam,  and  Myanmar   Africa:  Ethiopia  (Afar  Pastoralists),  Kenya,  Tanzania,  Malawi,  Mozambique,  South   Africa  (Lesuto)  

When  asked  about  his  work  over  many  decades  in  the  international  field,  Chris  Dureau,   Matrix  Consulting  reflects,    Actually  I  am  feeling  very  affirmed  by  the  impact  that  ABCD  has  had  on  the  work  that   myself  and  others  have  done  introducing  it  to  the  international  development  sector.    We   now  have  viable  programs  led  by  Australian  Agencies  using  ABCD  in  many  countries   including  in  Africa,  Pacific  and  South-­‐East  Asia  and  their  ‘success’  rate  by  comparison   with  others  is  considered  exceptional.    Chris  has  been  involved  in  a  broad  range  of  programs  starting  in  2005  where  ABCD  was   used  as  the  strategy  to  engage  community  in  school  repair  and  maintenance  and  build   capacity  of  school  management  committees  in  more  than  2500  primary  school  locations   across  Papua  New  Guinea.    ABCD  was  adopted  by  many  community  development   workers  in  over  3000  villages  across  the  country  and  is  considered  today  as  an  AusAID   best  practice  project.  More  recently,  in  2012,  ABCD  and  asset  mobilisation  was  used  as  a   key  feature  in  the  development  of  tools  for  Community  Monitoring  and  Evaluation  of   Government  development  programs  in  remote  locations.  

 

 

By  2006,  as  momentum  gathered  in  Australia,  Mike  Green,  of  ABCD  for  Inclusion,   undertook  his  first  Australian  tour  which  was  hosted,  in  partnership,  by  Ted  Smeaton,   Benevolent  Society  and  Dee  Brooks,  FAC,  who  are  also  International  Faculty  Members  of  

the  ABCD  Institute.    This  series  of  workshops  focused  on  ABCD  in  the  disability  sector   and  the  initial  training  led  to  a  series  of  workshops  with  the  Department  of  Ageing,   Disability  and  Home  Care  (ADHC),  which  was  initially  delivered  by  Ted  Smeaton.    This   work  ultimately  led  to  influencing  policy  development  as  Ted  supported  ADHC  to   develop  the  now  current  Ability  Links  job  description.    With  the  approaching  National  Disability  Insurance  Scheme  (NDIS)  roll  out  throughout   Australia,  Ted  worked  tirelessly  with  the  sector,  until  his  unfortunate  passing  in  2012.   Dee  Brooks  has  continued  delivering  this  vital  ongoing  work.  Vale  Ted  Smeaton.  

  Mike  Green  revisited  and  teamed  up  with  Dee  Brooks  and  Michaela  Kennedy  of  the   Jeder  Institute  (who  helped  to  blend  Person  Centred  Practices  with  ABCD)  and  in  2013   the  first  Unconference,  a  participant-­‐led  gathering,  was  hosted  based  on  strengths-­‐ focused  practices  and  the  underpinning  principles  of  participatory  leadership.  The   Unconference  New  South  Wales  is  now  in  its’  3rd  year  with  the  Inaugural  Victorian   Unconference  planned  for  later  in  the  year  plus  3  x  2  day  events,  in  conjunction  with   ImagineBetter,  across  3  locations  in  New  Zealand  in  2015.    On  the  advice  of  the  Department  of  Ageing,  Disability  and  Home  Care  (ADHC)  and  due   to  the  ongoing  rollout  of  the  NDIS,  until  the  present  time,  ABCD  and  Person  Centred   Practice  has  been  an  integral  part  of  supporting  services,  organisations  and  individuals   through  the  minefield  of  changes  this  has  brought.  

  In  2007,  a  group  of  ABCD  enthusiasts,  from  Australia  and  New  Zealand,  formed  the   ABCD  Asia  Pacific  Network.  The  founding  members,  Judi  Geggie,  Dee  Brooks,  Jody   Kretzmann,  Peter  Kenyon,  Steve  Hall,  David  Wilson,  Ted  Smeaton  and  Ric  Thompson   continued  to  promote  and  deliver  training  and  workshops  throughout  Australia,  New   Zealand  and  the  Asia  Pacific.  By  2009,  a  membership  website  was  established  to  offer   support,  share  successes  and  help  with  challenges  and  evaluation.  Judi  Geggie,  FAC,   explains,    The  ABCD  Asia  Pacific  network  became  a  vehicle,  which  provided  a  framework  for  the   provision  of  training  to  practitioners  in  a  focused  and  regulated  way  and  to  create  a   united  voice  to  tackle  bureaucracy.   In  2010,  the  2nd  ABCD  Asia  Pacific  Conference  hosted  by  the  Family  Action  Centre,   University  of  Newcastle  was  held  and  Cormac  Russell,  Nurture  Development  UK  and   Alison  Mathie,  Coady  Institute,  Canada  joined  a  growing  number  of  practitioners   including  Adrian  Pyle,  Uniting  Church.  Adrian  remembers,    I  first  heard  of  ABCD  in  2004  when  I  left  the  corporate  sector  to  take  on  a  grassroots   community  organizing  role  with  the  Uniting  Church.  The  break  from  the  corporate  world   meant  I  was  searching  for  a  break  from  deterministic,  top  down  models  of  organizing.   ABCD  and  I  seemed  destined  to  meet  in  that  role  and  my  heart  leapt  –  or  to  put  it   another  way  my  heart  and  my  head  connected  around  the  ABCD  way  of  thinking.  ABCD   offers  a  way  that  I  can  connect  community  organizing  to  the  deepest,  mystical   understandings  of  the  World’s  great  religions.  It  seems  to  be  saying  “This  is  the  way  life   really  works.”  

   Adrian  had  started  working  for  a  little,  local  Uniting  Church  congregation  with  no   academic  background  or  professional  experience  of  community  development  but  a   deep  desire  to  help  communities  knit  together.  From  the  first  moment  he  heard  about   the  notion  of  ABCD  it  just  seemed  to  “make  sense.”    In  reflection,  Adrian  said  that  some  people  saw  it  just  as  a  tool  to  accentuate  the   positive,  but  he  could  see  even  at  those  early  stages  that  it  was  more  than  just  a  tool  –  it   was  a  change  of  mindset.  The  change  of  mindset  wasn’t  just  about  psychological   positivity;  it  was  about  seeing  communities  holistically,  which  he  also  documents   through  his  Gift-­‐A-­‐Blog,  and  as  Adrian  says,    I  am  proud  of  how  we  have  grown  a  small  community  in  and  around  the  Uniting  Church   who  see  this  way  of  seeing  the  world  as  spiritually  rich.  We’ve  been  part  of  bigger  ABCD   programs,  like  the  national  2009  Building  Belonging  initiative  for  thinking  holistically   about  aged  care  and  we’ve  kicked  off  lots  of  smaller  initiatives  (such  as  a  small  group   within  a  congregation  “getting  it”  and  setting  out  to  help  incubate  this  way  of  thinking  in   wider  and  wider  groupings).  

   By  2012,  larger  contract  work  had  commenced  with  government  departments  and   medium  to  large  organisations.  Oneinteresting  contract  undertaken  by  the  FAC  was   implementing  ABCD  practices,  blended  with  Appreciative  Inquiry  and  the  Art  of  Hosting   practices  into  the  Defence  Community  Organisation,  (DCO),  Department  of  Defence,   Australia,  which  saw  Dee  Brooks  and  Graeme  Stuart  deliver  2  day  ABCD  workshops  on   many  military  bases  across  Australia.  ABCD  also  inspired  Graeme  to  initiate  community-­‐ led  initiatives  in  both  his  work  and  home  life,  which  he  documents  through  his   Sustaining  Community  blog  and  teaches  through  an  Engaging  Communities  elective  at   the  University  of  Newcastle.  

  Since  2008  both  Australia  and  New  Zealand  have  benefited  by  regular  visits  by  Jim  Diers,   head  of  Neighbourhoods  Inc.  With  great  enthusiasm  Jim  has  facilitated  workshops  in   many  communities  in  Australia  and  New  Zealand  and  these  workshops  have   strengthened  the  appreciation  of  ABCD  thinking  in  practitioners  and  policy  makers.  The   Municipal  Association  of  Victoria,  in  conjunction  with  the  Bank  of  IDEAS,  has  been  

instrumental  in  opening  up  many  of  the  opportunities  for  Jim  to  present  to  many   audiences  in  the  sector.   In  2012,  inspired  by  Peter  Kenyon  and  Dee  Brooks’  work  in  the  Newcastle  and  Illawarra   regions,  ABCD  practitioner  groups  were  intentionally  coming  together  across  the   country  in  the  form  of  both  the  ABCD  Newcastle  group  and  the  ABCD  Illawarra  group   who  were  looking  for  ways  to  support  practitioners  and  community  members  and  to   explore  how  best  to  work  together  for  the  benefit  of  individuals  and  communities.       In  2013  a  new  stream  of  practitioner  consciousness  was  also  unfolding  as  strengths-­‐ focused  practices  were  becoming  more  mainstream  so,  more  Train  the  Trainer   workshops  were  co-­‐delivered  by  Dee  Brooks,  Jim  Diers  and  Peter  Kenyon  and   consultations  with  government  departments  such  as  the  Australian  Emergency   Management  Institute  were  co-­‐designed.  Large-­‐scale  community  conversations  were   being  hosted  in  a  range  of  communities  using  ABCD  and  the  Art  of  Hosting  practices   around  conversations  that  matter,  such  as  “What  does  inclusion  mean  to  our   community?”  and  Peter  Kenyon,  who  is  currently  the  Chair  of  ‘All  We  Need  is  Right   Here‘  in  Kalamunda,  WA,  commenced  one  of  the  biggest  community  asset  mapping   initiatives  ever  undertaken  globally,  involving  15  geographic  communities  and  120+   communities  of  interest.      In  the  year  2014,  David  Bowen,  CEO  of  the  newly  established  National  Disability   Insurance  Scheme  (NDIS)  in  opening  the  Queensland  Disability  Conference  held  high  the   Inclusion  Works  “Half  Empty  /  Half  Full”  foam  ABCD  memento  and  opened  his  speech  by   saying  “We  have  a  lot  to  learn  from  this  simple  yet  powerful  message.”   Over  the  last  20  years,  the  ABCD  Institute  has  provided  clear  language  and  simple   analogies  to  explain  what  ABCD  is  about  and  as  Peter  Kenyon  says,   We  have  to  acknowledge  there  were  a  whole  pile  of  people  doing  things  early  on  to  get   it  to  where  it  is  now  and  it  needed  clarification  beyond  the  basics  –  it  actually   incorporates  more  now.    So,  watch  this  space  as  the  work  of  ABCD  continues  to  strengthen  communities  and   inspire  people  across  the  Asia  Pacific  region  and  beyond!  

 

 

Below  are  the  website  links  for  the  people  who  contributed  and  places  mentioned   throughout  this  historical  reflection:    http://abcdasiapacific.ning.com    https://abcdillawarra.wordpress.com   http://www.allweneedisrighthere.org   http://bankofideas.com.au    http://www.coady.stfx.ca   http://www.communityeconomies.org/Home    http://www.gift-­‐a-­‐blog.net    http://heritagefutures.co.nz    http://www.imaginebetter.co.nz    http://www.imaginechicago.org    http://www.inclusionworks.org.au    http://innovativeresources.org    http://www.jeder.com.au    http://www.lighthouseresources.com.au    http://www.matrixconsulting.net.au  

 http://www.mav.asn.au   http://www.ndis.gov.au   https://www.newcastle.edu.au/research-­‐and-­‐innovation/centre/fac/abo...    http://www.neighborpower.org    http://www.nurturedevelopment.org    https://sustainingcommunity.wordpress.com   http://www.theunconference.net.au   http://www.visitoamaru.co.nz      

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