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HOW DID THE UNMONASTERY IDEA COME ABOUT?
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The idea for the unMonastery
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has now been going for 16 months.
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It came about in a session
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at the first unconference in Strasbourg.
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It was a room of about 30 people
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who came together with the realization that,
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in order to continue to do the work
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that they were doing and not burn out,
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not become alienated,
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there was the need to build a strong foundation
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or what I refer to as an infrastructure
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on which to do that work.
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Because although people refer to things
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like the sharing economy
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as a great evolution or paradigm shift or whatever,
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despite how great we may think this is,
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in our experiences with it,
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it doesn't really cut the mustard
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when it comes to actually feeding outselves
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or paying rent and stuff like that.
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So the unMonastery evolved from that conversation of
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what we need is a physical space
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because none of us really use that much money,
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funding isn't necessarily needed
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for a lot of the stuff that we execute on
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because it's skill-based, it's code-based,
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the tools are normally free
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and if they're not free we can probably build them.
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What we do struggle with is having
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property and space in which to do those things.
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So that was the kind of natural conversation
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that evolved that led us to say "Let's start a set of spaces".
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WHY "unMonastery"?
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The reason why we adopted the name "unMonastery"
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is because we wanted to create a space
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that doesn't necessarily have a fixed purpose
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but is kind of multi-use
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so when we thought about the different kinds of spaces
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that have existed throughout history
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we thought about the monastery because of the way
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they have never really had this fixed purpose:
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that they would brew beer,
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there was scripture,
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there was prayer and worship,
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there was a completely different set of actions
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that were executed in these spaces
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which seemed to mirror the way in which we wanted
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to construct a new space
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and we looked to other existing structures
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such as hackerspaces
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and thought there was something incredibly useful and powerful
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in those kinds of structures
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and particularly their spread.
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But one of the things we struggled with is that
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hackerspaces don't necessarily have a civic or social contract
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with the communities in which they are based
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and generally serve the individuals,
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whether it be hobbies or personal projects
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and things like that.
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So the monastery seemed like an interesting model
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because it had the same kind of silo approach
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that the hackerspaces have
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but also has
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this kind of social contract and interaction with its community.
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Since coining that term as a group actually
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if you begin to look at what the monasteries were doing
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in the early seventh or eighth century
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you begin to realize that maybe the name should have been
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REmonastery, because the contribution
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that monks and monastic life made to communities
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in terms of building the infrastructure and things like that
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is actually a lot of what we're attempting to do.
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HOW DID THE IDEA BECOME A PROTOTYPE?
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So after the first conference the idea did stick
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but we didn't really get very far in its development
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and we continued to have conversations,
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and write documents, and try and think:
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how do we get something like this off the ground?
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and it wasn't until the 2nd conference in December of last year
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that we all sat down, we were like
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"Okay, of all the things that we've spoken about
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this is the project that we're most committed to".
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And in the space of three days
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we worked together to formalize some of the structure
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of what the space might look like.
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We mined the metaphor of the monastery,
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begun to think about what would monastic principles
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look like in this sense,
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and built the website, created the logo,
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put out an initial call for applications,
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that asked quite a lot of complex and difficult questions
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of anybody that wanted to apply,
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because we saw this is like a real pledge of commitment.
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Five or six edgeryders came forward and said
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"yes I would fully commit to this project,
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were you to establish it somewhere".
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And coupled with that we have Alberto Cottica,
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who is one of the the founding members of Edgeryders,
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and he was working with Matera 2019
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in the [European] City of Culture [2019] bid,
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and it was only in this context the we had the opportunity
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to offer this as a potential model
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and Matera was interested and said yes
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and so that's kind of,
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in terms of necessity of realizing the project,
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how we end up in Matera.
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But I think it's really important to understand,
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particularly when I came here for the first time,
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that it's an incredible place
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but one can't describe to other people;
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and the generosity
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and the way in which the community
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here has interacted with us
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makes it seem like
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it almost couldn't start in any other place!
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WHAT'S THE FOCUS FOR unMonastery?
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Edgeryders originally developed within a policy context,
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so the unMonastery does have a policy slant.
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But [it] is much more focused on constructing a model
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that can create meaning and can create a safe space
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in which to articulate that meaning.
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But in the present moment there are a set of problems
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that the unMonastery has kind of been constructed to solve
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by combining them.
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So the 3 primary issues that the unmonastery is focused on is
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- high unemployment, particularly on the part of
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skilled people graduating from University
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- a massive amount of unused housing stock,
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and commercial stock, throughout Europe
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- and with the onset of austerity you see
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the rolling back of states service provision
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and the need to plug that gap if we're to continue.
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And then there's 2 other things that are less primary, but that's
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- brain drain from small towns and cities to capital cities.
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There's the desire to roll that back in some way,
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and unMonastery is very firmly a model
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that can only be used in the context of small towns and cities,
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and never be placed in the capital city
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because it's just not appropriate.
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- and the last thing is a particular focus
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on creating resilient processes, infrastructure,
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and ways of working that can be sustainable
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in the event of future and existing crises.
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So I think those things are really fundamental
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to what the unmonastery essentially is
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WHAT'S HAPPENING HERE IN MATERA,
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AND WHAT'S NEXT FOR unMonastery?
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The unMonastery project has been
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quite a heavy thing to carry
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because there hasn't been any money involved.
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Edgeryders is already
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quite a precarious distributed network of people.
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At the second conference, when we really knew
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that we were going to do it,
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I stepped forward and said that I would facilitate
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and administrate the project
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but that would not mean that I was in any way its sole owner
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or that I would get to make specific decisions
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and I've tried to extricate myself
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as much as possible from that process.
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So this is probably the first real opportunity
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since that moment
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to come together again as a community
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and to feed in all of the things that we've been thinking
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and roughly sketching out online
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since that conference in December of last year,
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and really solidify what the challenges are,
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punch holes in the existing model,
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and figure out how we can make something like this
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effective in 4 months
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because it is only really a prototype,
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so there's a lot to build, and construct, and agree on
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before we actually turn up here in February.
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So the things going forward is
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establishing clearer roles for the people
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who've stepped forward to be involved in the project,
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to accept a series of applications
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that have been made meet the criteria of
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[addressing the] challenges that exist within Matera
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and I think also what has arisen out the last 24 hours
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is the need to keep this building alive
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between now and February.
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So there's a stack of other things that need doing
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but I would say that's probably the list of priorities.