The Trampoline Effect: Redesigning our Social Safety Nets

Author:   Gord Tulloch ,  Sarah Schulman
Publisher:   Reach Press
ISBN:  

9781777314804


Pages:   202
Publication Date:   27 October 2020
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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The Trampoline Effect: Redesigning our Social Safety Nets


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Overview

"""Needy,"" ""high-risk,"" ""vulnerable,"" ""slow."" When the words people use to describe themselves are the same as the labels in their case files, what does that say about how our social welfare systems shape the identity and possibilities of those who use them? In 2014, three disability organizations asked an international team of designers and social scientists to help them understand and address lived experiences of social isolation. The team moved into a social housing complex in the ""loneliest city"" in Canada, Vancouver, in order to get to know their neighbours with and without disabilities. The project resulted in a five-year journey of partnership and team building, co-design and prototyping, failure and learning. The social sector is stuck. Seventy years since the rollout of the modern welfare state, Canada is left with a cracked and overburdened old-world system that struggles to provide basic care. Human needs for connection, belonging, purpose and agency are largely forgotten, or actively thwarted, which prevents people from living towards their potential. Whether it is in the disability sector, or in mental health and addictions, homelessness, immigration and refugee services, youth at risk, etc., the patterns are the same: cultures of compliance; rigidity and inflexibility; deeply embedded assumptions, rhetoric and ideology; the constant recycling of similar solutions; counting up the things that don't really matter; hoarding power and control. But how do you change it? How do you reshape a giant ecosystem with engrained approaches, habitual reactions and vested interests? Instead of going big, Tulloch and Schulman suggest going small. They articulate a series of twelve strategies, or ""stretches,"" that will enable organizations to reach in new directions. Things like attending to beauty, purpose, and identity, and designing roles that activate community capacity and bridge people to it. The aggregate of those efforts across time and contexts, they argue, can lead to a gradual repurposing of the social safety net. This book is for anyone who plays a role in the social service system ecosystem, whether you are a frontline worker, manager or leader; researcher or policymaker; part of a vocational training or social worker program; a government funder, community foundation or philanthropist; or a professional association. It's also for social innovators and intrapreneurs trying to bring change to communities and organizations. Lastly, it's for social scientists and designers who are curious to see applications of their methods to the redesign of the welfare state."

Full Product Details

Author:   Gord Tulloch ,  Sarah Schulman
Publisher:   Reach Press
Imprint:   Reach Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.20cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.304kg
ISBN:  

9781777314804


ISBN 10:   1777314801
Pages:   202
Publication Date:   27 October 2020
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Gord Tulloch has performed many roles in the social services, some involving system building (quality assurance, policy analysis, technical writing, management) and some involving system delivery (front-line care worker, college/university instructor). Presently, he is the Director of Innovation at posAbilities, and a social intrapreneur who is trying to change the social service system from within. Gord holds a BA (Hons.) in philosophy and a Master of Arts in Liberal Studies. Dr. Sarah Schulman has spent her career in buses, bingo halls, and back alleyways as a social scientist focused on the experiences of people living on the margins. She is a founding partner of InWithForward, an international social design organization whose teams have produced award-winning and scalable interventions. InWithForward is her fourth organization; she started her first in elementary school. Sarah holds a BA (Hons.) in human biology, an MA in education, and a DPhil in social policy from Oxford University, where she was a Rhodes Scholar.

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