
Books & Papers
What is Professionalism in Dialogue - William Isaacs
William Isaacs
Despite three decades of practice, dialogue has no shared standards for excellence. William Isaacs, co-founder of the field; outlines what's needed to make it a genuine profession, from theory of change to the role of the Self.
Dialogue has emerged over three decades as a distinct field with multiple threads: collective social intervention, deliberative democracy, diplomacy, organisational development. Yet despite this growth, there are no shared standards for excellence or ethical performance; no unifying ideas about the knowledge underlying these efforts. William Isaacs, whose work with David Bohm helped establish the field, addresses what's needed to professionalise dialogue. Drawing on Donald Schön's critique of technical rationality, he argues that professional knowledge must include tacit embodied knowing, a theory of 'the thing' being addressed (in dialogue, this is incoherent thought), and understanding of micro-patterns of behaviour. The theory of change centres on 'containers'; holding environments that evolve through phases: politeness, disturbance, inquiry, and flow. Isaacs concludes that what's missing is explicit recognition of the Self; individual and collective; as the source of subtle intelligence that can transform fragmented thought and identity. This paper provides essential theoretical grounding for the Academy's professionalisation efforts.
Format
Paper
Category
Books & Papers
Topics
Facilitation and practice, The dialogic container
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