为学生居住空间的渐进式改造寻找共同点:作为Bricoleuric经纪人的居住委员会成员

Neo Pat Maseko, Shawn Stützner
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这篇文章的灵感来自于有关居住委员会成员及其在社区中的领导作用的讨论。在这些对话中提出的想法引起了对复杂背景下协作和进步的社会变革经纪的概念探索的研究兴趣。特别是,在这一背景下,确定的兴趣涉及在学生事务管理和居住委员会(RC)管理之间寻找共同点。具体的重点是RC领导团队作为战略家,定位于处理政策解释和制定中潜在的冲突解决方案。这里提出的论点与他们在多大程度上能够以一种促进居住社区对政策的合议和友好解释的方式做到这一点有关。其中固有的概念是管理政策制定和政策执行之间潜在的脱节。关于这一关注的主要问题表现为,作为多视角渐进转型战略的一部分,RCs如何从活跃的文化居住空间的一部分转变为对话对话的关键参与者。事实上,在实现转型的同时,在意识形态和政治复杂性的背景下,协调凝聚力的动态问题仍然存在。鉴于固有的情境复杂性,本文采用了一种多元的理论思路,需要多视角取向。在这方面,批判复杂性理论、批判系统理论、变革学习和希望理论的适当组成部分解释了这一理论方法。进一步的考虑是寻找进步和变革的共同基础的可行性。在这方面,论点围绕着审查与实现所设想的意图有关的系统因素,即共同利益的共同基础。在这一争论中,利害攸关的是RC身份的概念及其在建立基于价值观的政策解释和制定的住宿系统中的作用,同时弥合意识形态分歧,并在学生事务管理和住宿社区的期望之间找到共同点。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Finding Common Ground towards Progressive Transformation in Student Residence Spaces: Residence Committee Members as Bricoleuric Brokers
This article stemmed from discussions related to residence committee members and their role as leaders within their communities. The ideas presented during these conversations gave rise to a research interest for a conceptual exploration of collaborative and progressive social transformative brokering within a complex context. In particular, the identified interest within this context relates to finding common ground, between, inter alia, student affairs management, and residence committee (RC) management in residence spaces. The specific focus is the RC leadership team as strategists who are positioned to deal with potential conflict resolution in policy interpretation and enactment. The argument presented here has to do with the extent to which they can do this in a manner that facilitates the collegial and amicable interpretation of policy in residence communities. Inherent within this is the notion of managing the potential disjuncture between policy formulation and policy implementation. The primary question about this concern finds expression in how RCs move from being part of active cultural residence spaces to critical participants in dialogic conversations as part of a multi-perspectival progressive transformation strategy. Indeed, while bringing about transformation, the dynamic issues of brokering cohesion within a context of ideological and political complexity remain. Given the inherent situational complexities, the article adopts a bricoleuric theoretical thread that requires a multiperspectival orientation. In this regard, appropriate components of critical complexity theory, critical system theories, transformative learning, and hope theory account for this theoretical approach. A further consideration is that of a positionality of finding progressive and transformative common ground. In this regard, the argument revolves around examining the systemic factors that bear relevance for actualising the envisaged intention, that is, common ground in the interests of the common good. At stake in this argument is the notion of RC identity and their role in building a values-based residence system of policy interpretation and enactment, while bridging the ideological divide and finding common ground between the expectations of student affairs management and the residence community.
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