Weird legal stuff

jail by the_kid_cl
Man jailed when daughter fails to get diploma:
[Via The Seattle Times]

A man ordered by a judge to make sure his daughter hit the books has found himself in jail because she failed to earn a high school equivalency diploma.
[More]

I’d like to hear more about this. The daughter is almost 19, has a fiance, an 18-month old child, lives with her mother, yet the father is the one going to jail for 6 months because the daughter did not get a GED. I thought that after 16, you could not be compelled to attend school. And how does a non-custoidial parent become responsible for an adult?

Lots of questions. Judges are not usually quite this stupid without some sort of legal reasoning. I wonder what the original charges were and why they were brought. There is really only one side of this story here. But it is a really weird side. Who gets 6 months in jail anyway? Just weird.

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Knowledge hoarding

diffusion by Bitterjug
[Crossposted at SpreadingScience]
Is knowledge hoarding all about your pay cheque?:
[Via Library clips]

The other day I posted on, Participation is the currency of the knowledge economy.
The word “participation” can be interchanged for “social captial”, “conversation”, “contribution”, knowledge sharing”, but I chose “participation”, because “conversation” cannot happen without “participation.” And “participation” sounds more involved, sustained, or perpetual than “contribution” or “knowledge sharing.”

Anyway in that post I mentioned that the way companies currently operate is driven by each worker building their “intellectual captial” to get ahead, and to differentiate themselves. The more “intellectual capital” you have the more you are worth something or unique to the company. This kind of means workers compete with each other, or at least try to have unique power that will make them an asset to the firm. In this environment “knowledge sharing” would be the worst thing you could do, as you would be giving away your “edge”, giving away what makes you a unique asset to the company.

Of course we all know the “wisdom of crowds”, and an open and transparent participation model leads to ideas and conversation, which leads to discovery and collaboration. The act of sharing and finding saves others from re-inventing the wheel, saving money and project cycle-time.
A company that runs on a social captial model runs on the notion that “two minds are better than one”, so why not have a culture where these minds have open dialogue. In the end this opportunity for access to knowledge to help you with your work and to find new work brings the company closer to innnovation, and more honest client relationships.

No matter how simple the tools, and no matter even if people understand the benefits of “knowledge sharing” it just won’t happen if the company culture is about “intellectual captial” rather than “social capital.”
[More]

Organizations that depend on the creativity and innovations of their employees will not be as successful if they utilize knowledge hoarding when compared to those that have learning, collaborative communities.

The diffusion of innovations has been well studied. It is an outgrowth of human social networks. The rate at which information traverses the network will determine how rapidly a new idea gets accepted and used.

If certain people hoard information, they prevent this flow. In hierarchical companies, this hoarding can be useful to the hoarder, since they can position themselves as the node through which the information must flow. Knowledge is power.

In the highly networked world found in many companies today, however, this is more difficult. Preventing information flow along other routes becomes harder. The hoarder loses all power if someone else spreads the knowledge.

Just as the Internet routes around damage when a node goes down, so do well-connected human social networks route around knowledge hoarders, diminishing their power.

Companies that lessen the power of hoarders will have more rapid and successful diffusion of new ideas that can have huge impacts on the bottom line. Organizations that fail to deal with hoarders will not be as adaptive or as responsive to innovation. And, if the hoarder takes their information elsewhere, the organization is left with much less than it had before.

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RenGen?

feather by aussiegall
How to reach and engage the renaissance generation | Chron.com – Houston Chronicle:
[Via Shannon Buggs/Houston Chronicle]

The revolution will not be televised because the revolution is live and direct on the Internet.

A paraphrase of Gil Scott-Heron’s classic spoken-word anthem describes Patricia Martin’s message to community arts and business leaders.

Martin, a cultural marketing consultant based in Chicago, is documenting a “cultural metamorphosis” that is part of “the disruption that occurs when the dominant civilization loses its relevance and another rises to replace it.”

And what comes next is the renaissance generation, RenGen for short, an era dominated by people who are “smart, self-expressive, idealistic and cynical all at once,” she predicts.
[More]

Neologisms are tricky. And consultants are always coming up with ones that only they see. RenGen – short for renaissance generation – is not one of my favorites. I don’t really see how it is different from Generation Y or millennials, except that Ms. Martin coined it. Yet the first two are in Wikipedia while Rengen is not (unless you are looking for a lake between Sweden and Norway).

Anyway, look at what she has to say and let’s not worry about jargon too much.

• Establish a Facebook group and a MySpace page.
• Understand why your core customer is turning to you.
• Identify your potential nonprofit and for-profit collaborators.
• Brag about everything you do. Fake it ’til you make it.
• Get out of the house and join the chamber of commerce.
• Rethink the ancient patronage model.
• Forge marketing deals that mimic sports marketing deals.
• Be open source by allowing people to enter your game and morph and fuse with it without lowering your standards.

I’m not sure many of these are really useful to many charitable organizations. But, they do point out the need for a different model to reach out to this generation, a generation that will have substantial impact over the next few years.These people want to be part of the action, not just be a passive part of an organization. They want to get things done and to be a part of that.

They want to take it out for a spin. If they can’t, then they will go someplace where they can. the collaborative, participatory aspects of this generation has been discussed before.

This group is almost as big in the US as the Baby Boomers (75 million vs 80 million). Generation X is only 40 million. Not only are they highly social and collaborative, they also believe in reverse accumulation of knowledge – that is the younger you are, the more you know. But the Deloitte article has some very encouraging words, particularly for non-profits.


Millennials:

• Work well with friends and on teams
• Collaborative, resourceful, innovative thinkers
• Love a challenge
• Seek to make a difference
• Want to produce something worthwhile
• Desire to be a hero
• Impatient
• Comfortable with speed and change
• Thrive on flexibility and space to explore
• Partner well with mentors
• Value guidance
• Expect respect

Matching a non-profit’s goals towards this generation using new online tools could be tricky. Collaboration will be key. They should make good volunteers, perhaps in setting up the charity’s Facebook page. I’m sure we all can find some good ideas. But these are the people who need to get connected now.

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