Posts

Rhizomatic Structures: Organizing Like Nature

PowerPoint presentation:  Rhizomatic Structures: Organizing Like Nature Rhizomatic structures are models of organization inspired by natural root systems known as rhizomes. Unlike traditional hierarchical systems that resemble trees—with a central trunk and branching levels—rhizomes grow horizontally, spreading in multiple directions without a single origin or center. This makes them decentralized, interconnected, and highly adaptive. The concept of the rhizome was developed philosophically by Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari in their book A Thousand Plateaus. They used it to describe systems that grow through relationships and connections rather than through hierarchy and control. Key Characteristics of Rhizomatic Systems Rhizomatic systems share several defining features. First, they are decentralized, meaning there is no single authority controlling the entire structure. Instead, decision-making is distributed across the network. Second, they emphasize connectivity. Any part of...

Rootwork: The Underground Remembers

“ Rootwork: The Underground Remembers” A Spoken Word Performance on Rhizomes and Resistance (Lights low. A slow breath. A single voice begins—steady, grounded.) They tried to map us like trees. Straight lines. Clear roots. Branches labeled, numbered, controlled. But we were never trees. We were roots that refused to be seen. (Pause. Step forward.) Beneath the soil— where silence is not absence, but strategy— we learned how to move without being caught. Not upward… but outward. Not ordered… but connected. Like something ancient whispering through the dark. (Beat.) Call it survival. Call it memory. Call it what  and  once named— the rhizome. But we didn’t need the word to know the way. (Shift tone—more rhythmic.) A knock on the door that meant run. A song in the field that meant north. A lantern in the window that meant safe. This was the language of the — not written in books, but carried in breath, in footsteps, in trust. No headquarters. No single map. No one body to break. B...

Rhizomes and Historical Underground Movements

Rhizomes and Historical Underground Movements The concept of the rhizome, developed by Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari in A Thousand Plateaus, offers a powerful way to understand underground movements throughout history. These movements often operated not as rigid hierarchies, but as decentralized, adaptive networks—much like rhizomes in nature. The Rhizome as a Survival Structure A rhizome spreads underground, hidden from view, sending out shoots in multiple directions. This makes it: difficult to control or destroy capable of regenerating after disruption able to grow quietly beneath the surface Historical underground movements adopted similar structures—not necessarily by theory, but by necessity. When visibility meant danger, invisibility became intelligence. Key Rhizomatic Traits in Underground Movements 1. Decentralization No single leader held all knowledge. Leadership was often distributed to avoid collapse if one person was captured. 2. Secrecy through fragmentation Particip...

The Internet as a Rhizomatic Structure

Image
The Internet as a Rhizomatic Structure The internet is often described as one of the most powerful real-world examples of a rhizomatic structure—a system that grows, adapts, and connects without a single central authority. Drawing from the philosophical ideas of Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari in A Thousand Plateaus, the rhizome provides a framework for understanding how complex, decentralized networks like the internet function. Understanding the Rhizome In nature, a rhizome is a horizontal root system that spreads underground, sending out shoots in multiple directions. It has no central trunk, no singular origin, and no fixed path of growth. Instead, it expands through connection, adaptability, and resilience. Deleuze and Guattari used this botanical model as a metaphor to describe systems of knowledge, culture, and organization that: operate without hierarchy allow multiple points of entry and exit evolve through relationships rather than command The Architecture of the Internet T...

Rhizomatic Structures in Human Organizations

Rhizomatic Structures in Human Organizations Rhizomatic structures refer to models of human organization inspired by the biological concept of a rhizome—an underground plant stem that spreads horizontally, forming interconnected networks without a central root. This concept has been adopted in philosophy, social theory, and organizational studies to describe decentralized, adaptive, and non-hierarchical systems. Conceptual Origins The term “rhizome” was developed as a philosophical metaphor by Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari in their work A Thousand Plateaus (1980). They contrasted the rhizome with traditional “tree-like” (arborescent) structures, which are hierarchical, linear, and centralized. In their framework, rhizomes represent systems that are: Non-hierarchical Continuously evolving Open-ended and dynamic Based on connection and multiplicity Characteristics of Rhizomatic Organizations Rhizomatic organizations differ significantly from conventional hierarchical institutions. Th...

Beyond Carbon: The Colonial Roots of Sahelian

Image
​ Beyond Carbon: The Colonial Roots of Sahelian Desertification ​Subtitle: Uncovering the historical, ecological, and human factors behind the expansion of the desert. ​For decades, the global conversation surrounding climate change has been dominated by a single metric: carbon emissions. While atmospheric shifts are undeniable, this narrow focus often obscures a much older and more visceral history of ecological degradation. In the Sahel—the semi-arid transition zone between the Sahara Desert and the Sudanian Savanna—the encroaching sands are not merely the result of a modern greenhouse effect. They are the scars of centuries of exploitation, the slave trade, and the systematic destruction of biological infrastructure. ​ The Disruption of Indigenous Wisdom ​Long before the Industrial Revolution, the Sahel was managed by complex indigenous systems designed for resilience. Nomadic pastoralism was a primary mode of survival, allowing communities to move livestock according to season...

Abundance in Plain Sight: A Guide to Asset-Based Community Growth

  ​ Abundance in Plain Sight: A Guide to Asset-Based Community Growth ​In many conventional approaches to urban planning or social advocacy, the first step is to perform a "needs assessment"—a process that catalogs what a neighborhood is missing, where its infrastructure is failing, and what problems need fixing. While well-intentioned, this deficit-based lens can inadvertently frame a community by its struggles. Asset mapping flips this script, beginning with a fundamental question: What are the strengths, skills, and resources already present in this community? ​By shifting the focus from "what is broken" to "what is working," asset mapping serves as the operational engine for community-led knowledge systems. It transforms a neighborhood from a collection of needs into a vibrant ecosystem of capabilities. ​The Layers of Community Wealth ​To map an asset is to recognize a resource that might be invisible to an outside observer. This inventory typical...