A series of crises, from ASBOs to concerns over security, and the adherence to outdated ways of thinking about social involvement have intensified concern about our sense of community. The way that we engage with those around us has changed. We no longer necessarily connect with either conventional structures like community societies or even less formal associative fora, like markets. Community involvement remains of vital importance, but structures of engagement no longer reflect the ways in which people are comfortable in having their say.
This work asks some questions about our assumptions of community and the possibilities implied by changes in our society and the nature of our conversations. It proposes that, by combining what we know about conversations with what we know about the changing nature of community, we have the opportunity to reinvigorate the public realm to engage a wider range of people and give voice to the wider range of opinion on which our society is now built.
Last year, we published Talk Us Into It, which examined the role of conversation in the...
Alexis de Tocqueville once wrote of the 'strange unsociability and reserved and taciturn...
Our recent publication, Talk Us Into It, has been covered today in the Times.The pamphlet...
One of the key themes of Talk us into it is the idea of deep conversation. Quite often...