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{{Short description|American political organization}} [[File:New World Alliance 1980.jpg|300px|thumb|upright=1.35|right|alt=Twenty people sitting in a circle |Governing Council of the New World Alliance meets at a lodge in upstate New York, September 1980. Leonard Duhl of [[UC Berkeley]] is seated at the upper left, Michael Marien of the [[World Future Society]] is seated with legs crossed at the upper right, and spiritual-politics theorist and activist [[Corinne McLaughlin]] is sitting to Marien's right.]] The '''New World Alliance''' was an American political organization that sought to articulate and implement what it called "transformational" political ideas. It was organized in the late 1970s and dissolved in 1983. It has been described as the first U.S. national political organization of its type<ref name=Wells /> and as the first entity to articulate a comprehensive transformational political program.<ref name=Stein /> The Alliance maintained a national office two blocks from the [[White House]]. It established chapters across the U.S., produced a 98-page political platform, conducted "Political Awareness Seminars" to help participants learn to communicate across ideological and psychological divides, initiated national "Consultations with Elected Officials," and produced a national political newsletter whose sponsors included ''[[Ecotopia]]'' author [[Ernest Callenbach]] and psychologist [[Carl Rogers]]. Over the decades, social scientists and others have sought to explain why the Alliance did not achieve a longer life. There is no agreement. Explanations have touched on history (the U.S. was not ready), culture (the Alliance was too [[Counterculture of the 1960s|counter-cultural]]), process (the commitment to near-unanimous [[consensus decision-making]] was too onerous), leadership (the people on the Governing Council did not have the personalities or skills to build a mass organization), transformational political assumptions and behaviors (said to be inappropriate, self-defeating, or cult-like), and more.{{refn|Many of these concerns were similar to those encountered by other organizations of the 1970s and 1980s that were seeking to develop alternatives to conventional political perspectives and processes. See, for example, [[Susan Brownmiller]] on the [[Second-wave feminism|second-wave feminist movement]],<ref>Susan Brownmiller, ''In Our Time: Memoir of a Revolution'', Delta Books / Dell Publishing Co., 1999, pp. 35–294. {{ISBN|978-0-385-31831-0}}.</ref> Andrew Cornell on [[Movement for a New Society]],<ref>Andrew Cornell, ''Oppose and Propose!: Lessons from Movement for a New Society'', AK Press, 2011, pp. 1–126. {{ISBN|978-1-849350-66-2}}.</ref> and [[John Rensenbrink]] on the early [[History of the Green Party of the United States|U.S. Green Party movement]].<ref>John Rensenbrink, ''Against All Odds: The Green Transformation of American Politics'', Leopold Press, Inc., 1999, Parts III and IV. {{ISBN|978-0-9660629-1-5}}.</ref>|group=nb}} Following the dissolution of the organization, many former Governing Council members and other founders of the Alliance – many near the beginning of their careers<ref name=Paulson /> – took transformational ideas into a variety of organizational settings, including the early [[Green Party of the United States|U.S. Green Party]] movement and the [[Multinational corporation|multinational corporate]] world. Their organizational efforts and published political writings extended into the 21st century. == A "transformational" politics == {{quote box|width=35%|quote="The 10 Goals of the New World Alliance: 1. A politics of hope; 2. A politics of healing; 3. A politics of rediscovery; 4. A politics of human growth; 5. A politics of ecology; 6. A politics of participation; 7. A politics of appropriate scale; 8. A politics of globalism; 9. A politics of technological creativity; 10. A politics of spirituality."|source=– New World Alliance, "Introductory Brochure," 1980.<ref name=Real>Mark Satin, ''New Age Politics: Our Only'' Real ''Alternative'', Lorian Press, 2015, pp. 196–97 (quoting the Alliance's brochure). {{ISBN|978-0-936878-80-5}}.</ref>|style=padding:8px}} After the political turmoil of the 1960s, many writers and activists began searching for a new political perspective that would give special weight to such topics as consciousness change, ecology, decentralization of power, and global cooperation.<ref>Paul H. Ray and Sherry Ruth Anderson, ''[[The Cultural Creatives|The Cultural Creatives: How 50 Million People Are Changing the World]]'', Harmony Books / Random House, 2000, chaps. 6–7. {{ISBN|978-0-609-60467-0}}.</ref><ref>[[Theodore Roszak (scholar)|Theodore Roszak]], ''Person / Planet: The Creative Disintegration of Industrial Society'', Anchor Press / Doubleday, 1978, chaps. 1–2. {{ISBN|978-0-385-00063-5}}.</ref> Some called the emerging new perspective "transformational."<ref>[[Willis Harman]], ''An Incomplete Guide to the Future'', W. W. Norton & Company, 1979, chap. 2 ("A Transformation Ahead?"). {{ISBN|978-0-393-95006-9}}.</ref><ref>[[George Leonard]], ''The Transformation: A Guide to the Inevitable Changes in Humankind'', Delacorte Press / Dell Publishing Co., 1972. {{ISBN|978-0-385-29075-3}}</ref> === Naming the Alliance's politics === The New World Alliance has been described by many terms other than transformational – among them, [[Paradigm shift|new paradigm]],<ref>Corinne McLaughlin and Gordon Davidson, ''Spiritual Politics: Changing the World from the Inside Out'', Ballantine Books, 1994, p. 70. {{ISBN|978-0-345-36983-3}}.</ref> [[Marilyn Ferguson|Aquarian Conspiracy]],<ref name=Olson>Bob Olson with Marilyn Saunders, interviewer, "[https://web.archive.org/web/20180711021842/http://www.ahpweb.org/images/stories/archive_pdfs/1980/December1980.pdf The New World Alliance: Toward a Transformational Politics]", ''AHP Newsletter'', December 1980, pp. 14–16. A publication of the [[Association for Humanistic Psychology]].</ref>{{refn|The reference is to Marilyn Ferguson's book ''The Aquarian Conspiracy: Personal and Social Transformation in the 1980s''.<ref name=Ferguson>Marilyn Ferguson, ''The Aquarian Conspiracy: Personal and Social Transformation in the 1980s'', Jeremy P. Tarcher Inc., 1980. {{ISBN|978-0-87477-191-6}}.</ref> Of the seven "Related books of interest" listed in Ferguson's chapter on politics,<ref>Ferguson, ''Aquarian'', p. 434.</ref> two were by members of the Alliance's Governing Council,<ref name=Ogilvy>James Ogilvy, ''Many Dimensional Man: Decentralizing Self, Society, and the Sacred'', Oxford University Press, 1977. {{ISBN|978-0-19-502231-5}}.</ref><ref name=Satin>Mark Satin, ''New Age Politics: Healing Self and Society'', Delta Books / Dell Publishing Co., 1979. {{ISBN|978-0-440-55700-5}}.</ref> and a third was by a founding sponsor of the Alliance's newsletter.<ref name=Vasconcellos>John Vasconcellos, ''A Liberating Vision: Politics for Growing Humans'', Impact Publishers, 1979. {{ISBN|978-0-915166-17-6}}.</ref>|group=nb}} [[New Age]]-oriented,<ref name=Wells>Alison Wells and Stanley Commons, "Moving Politics With Spirit (And Greyhound)," ''New Realities'' magazine, June–July 1979, pp. 23–25. The authors are identified as journal editor and executive director, respectively, of Self Determination, a California-wide organization advocating personal and political change.</ref>{{refn|Self Determination was characterized as an exemplary transformational political organization in Marilyn Ferguson's book ''The Aquarian Conspiracy''. According to Ferguson, it was founded in 1976 by California state assemblyman [[John Vasconcellos]] and other politicians and citizens to encourage Californians to take responsibility for their lives.<ref name=Self />|group=nb}} postliberal,<ref>Mark Satin, ''New Options for America: The Second American Experiment Has Begun'', The Press at California State University, Fresno, 1991, p. 6. {{ISBN|978-0-8093-1794-3}}.</ref> post-socialist,<ref name=Middle>Mark Satin, ''Radical Middle: The Politics We Need Now'', Westview Press and Basic Books, 2004, p. 29. {{ISBN|978-0-8133-4190-3}}.</ref> and [[Green politics|Green]].<ref name=Parkin>Sara Parkin, ''Green Parties: An International Guide'', Heretic Books Ltd., 1989, p. 294. {{ISBN|978-0-946097-27-2}}.</ref> A [[Libertarianism|libertarian]] magazine found the Alliance's newsletter to be "surprisingly libertarian,"<ref>Robert Poole, Jr. and Christine Dorffi, "[https://archive.org/details/sim_reason_1981-11_13_7/page/20/mode/2up?q=new+age+budget+biting+robert+poole+jr+and+christine+dorffi New Age Budget Biting]," ''[[Reason (magazine)|Reason: Free Minds and Free Markets]]'', vol. 13, issue no. 7 (November 1981), p. 20.</ref> and a book about [[radical centrism]] characterized the Alliance as radical centrist.<ref name=Ivor>Satin, ''Radical'', pp. 187–88.</ref> However, "transformational" has been the term most frequently used to describe the Alliance's politics, both by political scientists<ref name=Stein>Arthur Stein, ''Seeds of the Seventies: Values, Work, and Commitment in Post-Vietnam America'', University Press of New England, 1985, pp. 134–38. {{ISBN|978-0-87451-343-1}}. The author is identified as a political scientist at [[University of Rhode Island]].</ref><ref name=Preface>"Preface: Paths to Transformational Politics," in Stephen Woolpert, Christa Daryl Slaton, and Edward W. Schwerin, eds., ''Transformational Politics: Theory, Study, and Practice'', State University of New York Press, 1998, p. ix. {{ISBN|978-0-7914-3945-6}}. The lead editor is identified as a political scientist at [[Saint Mary's College of California]].</ref> and by the Alliance itself. For example, an article from the Alliance's chairperson was entitled "The New World Alliance: Toward a Transformational Politics,"<ref name=Olson /> and the Alliance's political platform is entitled "A Transformation Platform: The Dialogue Begins."<ref name=Paulson /> === Describing the Alliance's politics === [[File:JGordonMeltonCover.png|thumb |upright=0.7 |right |alt=Kindly looking older man with white hair and goatee. | Academic [[J. Gordon Melton]] said the Alliance attempted to combine left- and right-wing perspectives.]] Many attempts have been made to describe the Alliance's approach to transformational politics. Cultural critic Annie Gottlieb interviewed an Alliance member who said its goal was "to embody a new holistic vision of politics in America."<ref name=Gottlieb>Annie Gottlieb, ''Do You Believe in Magic?: Bringing the Sixties Back Home'', Simon & Schuster, 1987, p. 153 (quoting Marc Sarkady). {{ISBN|978-0-671-66050-5}}. Note that the pagination in the Times Books / Random House edition of this book is different.</ref> Futurists Jessica Lipnack and Jeffrey Stamps said the Alliance was attempting to introduce values into politics that had traditionally been outside it.<ref name=Lipnack>Jessica Lipnack and Jeffrey Stamps, ''Networking: The First Report and Directory'', Doubleday, 1982, pp. 107–08. {{ISBN|978-0-385-18121-1}}.</ref> British Green activist [[Sara Parkin]] named some of those values, including "healing," "rediscovery," and "spirituality."<ref name=Parkin /> Scholar [[J. Gordon Melton]] and his colleagues focused on the Alliance's commitment to combining supposed opposites – left and right, personal and political.<ref name=Melton>J. Gordon Melton, Jerome Clark, and Aidan A. Kelly, ''New Age Encyclopedia'', Gale Research, Inc., 1990, p. 324. ISSN 1047-2746. ISSN retrieved April 1, 2016.</ref> Citing the ancient Greek concept of [[Paideia]], Alliance chair Bob Olson told an interviewer that the Alliance wanted to build a society where every institution was geared to developing people's abilities and potentials.<ref name=Olson /> Political theorists [[Corinne McLaughlin]] and Gordon Davidson identified what they felt was a defining passage in one Alliance document: <blockquote>Politics is the way we live our lives. It is not just running for office. It is the way we treat each other, as individuals, as groups, as government. It is the way we treat our environment. It is the way we treat ourselves.<ref>McLaughlin, ''Spiritual'', p. 70 (quoting a New World Alliance document).</ref></blockquote> Arthur Stein, a political scientist at [[University of Rhode Island]], pointed to another passage in an Alliance document: <blockquote>The NWA seeks to break away from the old quarrels of "left against right" and help create a new consensus based on our heartfelt needs. It emphasizes personal growth – and nurturing others – rather than indiscriminate material growth. It advocates "human scale" institutions that function with human consideration and social responsibilities. It draws on the social movements of the recent past for new values like ecological responsibility, self-realization and planetary cooperation and sharing. It draws on our conservative heritage for values such as personal responsibility, self-reliance, thrift, neighborliness and community. It draws from the liberal traditions a commitment to human and civil rights, economic equity and social justice. We call this synthesis "New World" politics.<ref>Stein, ''Seeds'', p. 135 (quoting a New World Alliance document).</ref></blockquote> Author [[Kirkpatrick Sale]] observed that the Alliance's newsletter boiled its definition of transformational politics down to a phrase – "the reconceptualization of politics along human growth, decentralist, and world order lines."<ref name=Sale>Kirkpatrick Sale, "Kirkpatrick Sale's Letter from America", ''[[Resurgence & Ecologist|Resurgence]]'' magazine, vol. 89, November–December 1981, p. 6.</ref> "As sorry a mouthful of rhetoric as that is," Sale concluded, "that's roughly what this 'transformational' idea is all about."<ref name=Sale />{{refn|In an anthology from 1998, in an attempt to delineate the transformational politics concept, [[Auburn University]] political scientist Christa Slaton listed nine authors: [[Fritjof Capra]] (for ''The Tao of Physics'' and ''The Turning Point''), [[Marilyn Ferguson]] (for ''The Aquarian Conspiracy''), [[Betty Friedan]] (''The Feminine Mystique''), [[Hazel Henderson]] (''The Politics of the Solar Age''), [[John Naisbitt]] (''Megatrends''), [[Mark Satin]] (''New Age Politics''), [[E. F. Schumacher]] (''Small Is Beautiful''), and [[Alvin Toffler|Alvin and Heidi Toffler]] (''Future Shock'' and ''The Third Wave'').<ref>Christa Daryl Slaton, "An Overview of the Emerging Political Paradigm: A Web of Transformational Theories," in Woolpert et al., eds., ''Transformational'', cited above, p. 11.</ref>|group=nb}} == History == === The organizing tour === [[File:Mark Satin in 1978.jpg|thumb |upright=1.0 |right |alt=Determined-looking young man against city skyline. |[[Mark Satin]] at the start on his 24-city organizing tour for the Alliance, Vancouver, Canada, 1978. (Photo by [[Erich Hoyt]].)]] Organizing for the Alliance began in 1978, when author [[Mark Satin]] embarked on a two-year tour of North America.<ref name=Wells /><ref name=Lipnack /> Although the tour was initially designed to promote one of his books at conferences and other events, it quickly expanded into an effort to locate those who wanted to start a new political organization with a new political perspective.<ref name=Wells /> Satin told the authors of the book ''Networking'' that he traveled "systematically" to 24 cities and regions across the continent. He was especially interested in finding people committed enough to want to fill out an extensive questionnaire about the future organization.<ref name=Lipnack /> According to one magazine, by the summer of 1979 Satin had traveled over 50,000 miles, mostly by [[Greyhound Lines|Greyhound bus]].<ref name=Wells /> He stopped when he found 500 people that were willing to answer the questionnaire.<ref name=Lipnack /> === The questionnaire === The questionnaire, when finally composed and sent out, came to 21 pages.<ref name=Parkin /> One political science text later compared it to a [[Delphi method|Delphi]] survey.<ref name=Preface /> It consisted largely of multiple-choice questions<ref name=Paulson>Belden Paulson, ''Odyssey of a Practical Visionary'', Thistlefield Books, 2009, pp. 500–03. {{ISBN|978-0-9816906-1-2}}. The author is identified as a political scientist at [[University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee]].</ref> about what a transformation-oriented political organization should consist of.<ref name=Olson /> Some questions dealt with policy; for example, "How can we make small family farming more of an option for Americans?" Others dealt with structure – "How large should the Board of Directors be?"<ref name=Lipnack /> Of the 500 people the questionnaire was sent to, 350 responded.<ref name=Lipnack /> The author of the book ''Green Parties'' described the respondents as people involved in personal-growth work and social change.<ref name=Parkin /> The editors of a book on transformational politics described them as "academics, policy experts, and political activists interested in this emerging political perspective."<ref name=Preface /> While it is not clear how closely the organization followed the questionnaire in shaping itself, one political scientist thought it significant that the "overwhelming source" of U.S. political problems among questionnaire-answerers was found to be "our attitudes and values."<ref name=Paulson /> === "Governing Council" === [[File:Kirk Sale and Bob Olson.jpg|thumb|upright=1.15 |right |alt=Five happy-looking people at a lawn party. |GC chairperson Bob Olson (second from right) was a project director at the U.S. [[Office of Technology Assessment]].<ref name=GC /> GC member [[Kirkpatrick Sale]] (center) was a [[Neo-Luddism|Neo-Luddite]] theorist.<ref>Steven Jones, ''Against Technology: From the Luddites to Neo-Luddism'', Routledge, 2006, pp. 23–24. {{ISBN|978-0-415-97868-2}}.</ref>]] The questionnaire determined that a 39-member board of directors, called the Governing Council (GC), should be chosen to run the Alliance. In addition, it determined that the GC should be chosen from among the questionnaire-answerers themselves. Eighty-nine of them volunteered to stand for the GC, and the first 39 GCers were chosen by a variety of means: 40% by mail ballot, 30% by lottery, 20% by Satin (who'd met the questionnaire-answerers during his bus tour), and 10% by four women.<ref name=Lipnack /> The selection process produced a diverse GC. A political scientist pointed to "teachers, feminists, think-tank members."<ref name=Stein /> A journalist called attention to a [[Ronald Reagan]] speechwriter, a former [[Robert F. Kennedy]] speechwriter, a corporate vice-president, and a spiritual teacher.<ref name=Cox>Ted Cox, "New Age People: Alternative to Militarism," ''The Churchman'', August–September 1980, p. 7.</ref> A spokesperson for the Alliance touted "a co-author of the [[Pentagon Papers]]" as well as "several people from the erstwhile counterculture."<ref>Olson, "New World," p. 14.</ref> In 1980, the 39 GC members included [[James Benson|Jim Benson]], [[Clement Bezold]], [[Lex Hixon]], [[Miller Hudson]], [[John McClaughry]], [[Corinne McLaughlin]], [[Kirkpatrick Sale]], [[Mark Satin]], [[Utne Reader#History|Eric Utne]], Robert Buxbaum of the [[New York City Council|Office of the New York City Council President]], Jeff Cox of the [[The Rodale Institute|Rodale Institute]], Leonard Duhl of [[UC Berkeley]], Bethe Hagens of [[Governors State University]], Donald Keys of the [[World Federalism|World Federalists]], James Ogilvy of [[SRI International]], Bob Olson of the [[Office of Technology Assessment|Office of Technology Assessment of the U.S. Congress]], James Turner of ''[[The Chemical Feast]]'', Gail Whitty of the [[National Organization for Women|NOW-Detroit]] board of directors, Malon Wilkus of the [[Federation of Egalitarian Communities]], and Rarihokwats, founder of ''Akwesasne Notes'' newspaper from the [[Akwesasne|Mohawk Nation at Akwesasne]].<ref name=GC>"New World Alliance Governing Council, 1980–1981," in New World Alliance, ''[http://www.radicalmiddle.com/Platform2.pdf A Transformation Platform: The Dialogue Begins]'', New World Alliance publication, 1981, p. 98. Booklet, no ISBN assigned.</ref>{{refn|This list of Governing Council members and their organizational affiliations is drawn entirely from the "Governing Council" page of the Alliance's political platform.<ref name=GC /> No other source was used. It is a selective list, consisting of all GC members that have biographies on Wikipedia, and most GCers whose then-current affiliations – clearly stated on the "Governing Council" page – were to organizations with articles now on Wikipedia. To be the subject of a Wikipedia article, individuals and organizations must meet certain criteria; see [[WP:Notability]].|group=nb}} Besides being on the GC, Olson served as chairperson of the Alliance.<ref name=Olson /> === Structure and process === [[File:15th Street Financial District.jpg|thumb |upright=0.9 |right |alt=Stately looking buildings on a downtown street |The Alliance's national office was two blocks from the [[White House]], in the light brown building midway down the row of buildings here.{{refn|According to journalist Ted Cox, the address was 733 Fifteenth Street N.W., Washington, D.C.<ref name=Cox /> The address is given in Wikimedia's description of this photograph; to read it, click on the photo and then scroll down. The description identifies 733 as the sixth building from the right, and viewers should note that three narrow buildings to its immediate left are difficult to distinguish from one another. The entire stretch of buildings constitutes part of what is now known as the [[Financial Historic District (Washington, D.C.)|Financial Historic District]].|group=nb}}]] The Governing Council met semi-annually.<ref name=Marilyn>Marilyn Ferguson, "Foreword," in Mark Satin, ''New Options for America: The Second American Experiment Has Begun'', The Press at California State University, Fresno, 1991, p. xiii. {{ISBN|978-0-8093-1794-3}}.</ref> There was also a Coordinating Committee,<ref name=Olson /> and a national office was established two blocks from the [[White House]] in Washington, D.C.<ref name=Cox /> But one of the Alliance's expressed goals was "a politics of participation,"<ref name=Real /> and the GC chose not to run the Alliance from the top down. The authors of the book ''Networking'' describe the organization as "nonhierarchically structured" and say decisions were made by decentralized committees.<ref name=Lipnack /> There were also local chapters. Belden Paulson, a political scientist at [[University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee]], says that in the early years the Alliance had "a kind of missionary zeal" to establish local chapters across the U.S. He reports that 50 people turned up at the initial chapter meeting in Milwaukee and that the group met for several years.<ref name=Paulson /> The Alliance's processes emphasized consensus and even meditation. An encyclopedia from [[Gale (publisher)|Gale Research]] reports that the Alliance expressed a "commitment to consensus building in all our groups and projects."<ref name=Newsletter>Melton et al., ''Encyclopedia'', p. 324 (quoting the Alliance's newsletter).</ref> It also reports that Alliance chapters and projects claimed to use "short periods of silence [in order] to draw on our intuition in making decisions and solving conflicts."<ref name=Newsletter /> === Projects === The Alliance sustained four principal projects. ==== Political platform ==== {{quote box|width=35%|quote="The Transformation Platform of the New World Alliance is different from conventional political platforms in fundamental ways. ... It is an attempt to ''go beyond the polarity of left-against-right'' by integrating the highest values in our nation's conservative and liberal heritage with the learning that has taken place in recent social movements. ... It begins – but only ''just'' begins – a reconceptualization or paradigm change ''regarding the very nature of politics''. We recognize that public policy is only one "face" of politics. Equally important political work takes place in the community, the workplace, and in personal development and interpersonal relationships."|source=– New World Alliance, introduction to ''A Transformation Platform: The Dialogue Begins'', 1981.<ref>Paulson, ''Odyssey'', p. 501 (quoting the Alliance's platform, emphases in Paulson's quoted text).</ref>|style=padding:8px}} The Alliance produced a 98-page political platform that achieved what one commentator claimed was wide circulation.<ref name=Paulson /> ''A Transformation Platform: The Dialogue Begins'' discussed crime and justice, economics, science and technology, health, the environment, global affairs, and more.<ref name=Lipnack /> It made about 300 specific policy proposals.<ref name=Stein /> But it sought to do more than provide good ideas. Bob Olson, chair of the Alliance, tried to explain to the [[Association for Humanistic Psychology]] why he felt the platform was unique: <blockquote> ... we call [it] a ''Living Platform''. The platform offers concrete political proposals, but doesn't purport to offer final answers. It includes commentary and dissenting opinion, and it asks readers to criticize it and help improve it, so that over the years ahead it can serve as a focus for thousands of people to cooperate in thinking through the changes we need to make.<ref>Olson, "The New," p. 15.</ref></blockquote> ==== "Political Awareness Seminars" ==== These were day-long or weekend experiences designed to make participants more deeply aware of the political process and their own potential for using it to heal society.<ref name=Olson /> To some observers, the seminars functioned primarily to build self-confidence.<ref name=Lipnack /> To Olson, they helped participants discover and merge their visions of a better society, and explore how to implement them.<ref name=Olson /> To the authors of ''Spiritual Politics'', the key part came when participants were asked to act out their feelings toward their political adversaries – and were then told to reverse roles. "Many deep insights resulted," the authors wrote, "with participants discovering [they] often had problems similar to the ones they accused their adversaries of having."<ref>McLaughlin, ''Spiritual'', p. 109.</ref> ==== "Consultations with Elected Officials" ==== [[File:JohnVasconcellosJI1.jpg|thumb |upright=1.0 |right |alt=Head shot of middle-aged man with moustache |California legislator [[John Vasconcellos]] invited people to the Alliance's first "Consultation with Elected Officials" and was a featured speaker there.]] These were national conferences of "transformation-oriented" politicians,<ref name=Olson /> Alliance GC members, and other interested parties. Political science professor Belden Paulson, who helped coordinate the first one, in Milwaukee, says he recruited California state legislator [[John Vasconcellos]] and Colorado state legislator [[Miller Hudson]] to invite people to the weekend event and be speakers there. Sixteen elected officials ended up attending. There were also eight Alliance GC members, six academics, spiritual writer [[David Spangler]], and some residents of [[Intentional community|intentional communities]].<ref name=Paulson /> According to a letter Paulson quotes from one of the intentional-community residents, there was great tension at the consultation between pragmatists and visionaries – until the last day, when "it all came together, starting with the politicians who, one by one, spoke of how this opened whole new horizons for them."<ref>Paulson, ''Odyssey'', p. 502 (quoting letter).</ref> ==== National political newsletter ==== ''Renewal'' newsletter attempted to report on current affairs from a transformational perspective.<ref name=Olson /> It also attempted to critically assess relevant groups and books and serve as a forum for activists.<ref name=Stein /> It boasted nine founding sponsors – [[Ernest Callenbach]], [[Willis Harman]], [[Hazel Henderson]], [[Karl Hess]], Patricia Mische (co-author of ''Toward a Human World Order''<ref>Gerald Mische and Patricia Mische, ''Toward a Human World Order: Beyond the National Security Straitjacket'', Paulist Press, 1977. {{ISBN|978-0-8091-0216-7}}.</ref>), [[Jeremy Rifkin]], [[James Robertson (activist)|James Robertson]], [[Carl Rogers]], and [[John Vasconcellos]].<ref name=Stein /> The newsletter's annual "Transformational Book Award" was voted upon by 70 hand-picked academics and [[think tank]] staffers from across the U.S.<ref name=Sale /> === Restructuring and dissolution === The Alliance restructured itself in 1982. It decided to close its Washington, D.C. office but keep the Governing Council intact. Rather than running and funding projects and supporting an organizational infrastructure, it would seek to serve as a kind of umbrella for entrepreneurial, independently run projects.<ref name=Stein /> It dissolved the next year.<ref name=Green>Mark Satin, "[https://web.archive.org/web/20150910021729/http://www.green-horizon.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/GHM_26_web.pdf Miraculous Birth of the 'Ten Key Values' Statement]," ''Green Horizon'' magazine, vol. 9, issue no. 26, Fall–Winter 2012, p. 19. A publication co-edited by [[John Rensenbrink]], co-founder of the [[Green Party of the United States|U.S. Green Party]]. Retrieved April 26, 2016.</ref> == Assessments == [[File:Jeremy Rifkin 2009 by Stephan Röhl.jpg |thumb |upright=1.0 |right |alt=Head shot of middle-aged man giving a speech| Prominent writer and activist [[Jeremy Rifkin]] was a founding sponsor of the Alliance's political newsletter.<ref name=Stein />]] The Alliance raised many hopes in transformational circles. For example, ''New Realities'', a glossy transformation-oriented magazine, devoted a 3,000-word article to the organizing effort,<ref name=Wells /> and futurist [[Hazel Henderson]] pointed her readers beyond the [[Citizens Party (United States)|U.S. Citizens Party]] to the "more visionary" movement incorporating as the New World Alliance.<ref name=Henderson>Hazel Henderson, ''The Politics of the Solar Age: Alternatives to Economics'', Anchor Press / Doubleday, 1981, p. 19. {{ISBN|978-0-385-17150-2}}.</ref> Arthur Stein noted that each of the founding sponsors of the Alliance's political newsletter had distinguished themselves in their fields.<ref name=Stein /> To some observers, including some inside the organization, the Alliance fell short of its promise and potential. It was certainly "short-lived," as three political scientists put it.<ref name=Preface /> To other observers, the Alliance was a valuable pioneer. === External critics === Some critics focused on history and culture. To political scientist Belden Paulson, the Alliance fell short partly because it was too far ahead of its cultural moment.<ref name=Paulson /> To Annie Gottlieb, author of a book about the mainstreaming of [[Counterculture of the 1960s|Sixties-generation attitudes and values]], the Alliance fell short because it did not sufficiently root itself in the mainstream culture, and in the immediately practical and viable.<ref>Gottlieb, ''Do You Believe'', pp. 153–54.</ref> Other explanations focused on the Alliance's processes. Scholar [[J. Gordon Melton]]'s encyclopedia said the focus on consensus led to "extended meetings and minimal results" – which in turn led to dispirited participants.<ref name=Melton /> Even ''Aquarian Conspiracy'' author [[Marilyn Ferguson]] commented that the GC meetings, full of "intoxicating rhetoric" but little else, took their toll on one GC member.<ref name=Marilyn /> Still other explanations focused on internal dysfunction. Belden Paulson noted ongoing "friction and personality struggles." He also found it incomprehensible that the Alliance always seemed to be without money. He finally concluded that the GCers with the most power were more interested in advancing their own organizations.<ref name=Paulson /> Some critics were skeptical about, or hostile to, the Alliance's transformational ideology. Speaking on a panel with two Alliance GC members at an [[Association for Humanistic Psychology]] conference in 1982, political scientist [[Walter Truett Anderson]] rejected the concept of transformation. He argued that it had become a cliché and that society was not going to transform itself totally or quickly. He added that its advocates were on the verge of becoming "what I think can rightfully be called a cult."<ref>Stein, ''Seeds'', p. 137 (quoting Anderson).</ref> The Alliance generated opposition among [[Christian right|conservative Christians]] who worried that [[New Age]] ideas were being spread under the banner of transformational politics. For example, in her book ''The Hidden Dangers of the Rainbow'', attorney [[Constance Cumbey]] warned that New Age ideas were being "synergistically enhanced by the parallel operation of networking organizations such as New World Alliance."<ref name=Cumbey>Constance E. Cumbey, ''The Hidden Dangers of the Rainbow: The New Age Movement and Our Coming Age of Barbarism'', Huntington House, Inc., 1983, pp. 64–65. {{ISBN|978-0-910311-03-8}}.</ref> In an anthology called ''The New Age Rage'', religious philosopher [[Douglas Groothuis]] said transformational initiatives like the Alliance were slipping New Age ideas into [[Democratic Party (United States)|U.S. Democratic Party]] politics.<ref name=Groothuis>Douglas Groothuis, "Politics: Building an International Platform," in Karen Hoyt and the [[Spiritual Counterfeits Project]], eds., ''The New Age Rage'', Fleming H. Revell Company / Baker Publishing Group, 1987, pp. 97–98. {{ISBN|978-0-8007-5257-6}}.</ref> === Internal critics === {{quote box|width=35%|quote="Belief that a social transformation is happening serves to keep it from happening. Behaviors associated with the sandbox of political impotency include: pronouncement of actual or imminent success, confusion of goals and results, an acritical stance, hubris, an incapacitating dialect, pseudo holism, egalitarian blinders, and self-centeredness. Upward growth to escape the Sandbox Syndrome is a necessary ingredient of any serious social change."|source=– Alliance GC member Michael Marien, "The Transformation as Sandbox Syndrome," 1983.<ref name=Marien>Michael Marien, "[https://web.archive.org/web/20051018115004/http://www.ghandchi.com/iranscope/Anthology/mm/sandbox.htm The Transformation as Sandbox Syndrome]," ''[[Journal of Humanistic Psychology]]'', vol. 23, no. 1, Winter 1983, p. 7.</ref>|style=padding:8px}} Both before and after the Alliance dissolved, GC members publicly criticized the Alliance. In 1987, former GC member Marc Sarkady told an interviewer that the Alliance was too immersed in the [[Counterculture of the 1960s|counter-culture]].<ref name=Gottlieb /> In 1983, writing in a feminist quarterly, GCer Bethe Hagens said that – despite all the high-minded rhetoric and processes – the male GCers had been dismissive of the female GCers.<ref name=Hagens>Bethe Hagens, "[https://archive.org/details/creativewoman641983unse The Goddess in the New World Alliance]," ''The Creative Woman Quarterly'', vol. 6, no. 4, Fall 1983, p. 19. A publication of [[Governors State University]]. The author is identified as an anthropologist. Retrieved August 7, 2016.</ref> In 1982, [[Mark Satin]] complained to an audience of 400 that the Alliance could not decide on its mission.<ref>Stein, ''Seeds'', pp. 136-37 (quoting Satin).</ref>{{refn|GC members had disparate visions for the organization. Some GCers wanted the Alliance to be or become a political party,<ref>Bob Dunsmore, ''I Am: A Journey Through Times and Spaces'', iUniverse Publishing, 2011, p. 65. {{ISBN|978-1-4620-2432-2}}.</ref> Satin wanted the Alliance to model itself on grassroots mobilization and lobbying groups such as [[Moral Majority]],<ref name=Kelly>Mark Satin and [[Kevin Kelly (editor)|Kevin Kelly]], interviewer, "[https://archive.org/details/sim_whole-earth_whole-earth-review_winter-1988_61/page/106/mode/2up Mark Satin]," ''[[Whole Earth Review]]'', issue no. 61, Winter 1988, p. 107.</ref> and others – ultimately a majority – wanted the Alliance to play a less assertive, clearinghouse role.<ref>Stein, ''Seeds'', p. 138.</ref>|group=nb}} Later that decade Satin referred to his former colleagues as "beautiful losers,"<ref name=Kelly /> and even in the 2000s he was writing about what he saw as the Alliance's "ineptness" and its failure to understand and seize the moment.<ref name=Ivor /> A more systemic critique by a GC member was Michael Marien's essay "The Transformation as Sandbox Syndrome," published in the ''[[Journal of Humanistic Psychology]]'' in 1983.<ref>Marien, "The Transformation," cited above.</ref> While Marien aimed his critique at transformational political organizations (and activists) in general, the introduction discusses Marien's involvement in just one such organization – the Alliance.<ref name=Marien /> His targets in the essay include mistaking lofty goals for political significance, loving-kindness for effective action, and good intentions for actual results.<ref>Marien, "The Transformation," pp. 7–10.</ref> Toward the end of its existence, Alliance chair Bob Olson wrote – in a spirit of acceptance rather than blame – that the GC did not have the "personalities and skills" to create the kind of dynamic mass-membership organization that had originally been envisioned.<ref>Melton, ''Encyclopedia'', p. 324 (quoting Olson).</ref> === Positive views === Many observers have acknowledged the Alliance for what they see as pioneering contributions to the social change movement. For example, the director of Self Determination, a California-wide transformational political organization co-founded by [[John Vasconcellos]],<ref name=Self>Ferguson, ''Aquarian'', pp. 232–35.</ref> described the Alliance as "the first" national political organization of its kind.<ref name=Wells /> Political scientist Arthur Stein claimed it made "the first attempt to take ecological, decentralist, globalist, and human-growth ideas and translate them into a detailed, practical political platform."<ref name=Stein /> A pair of futurists credited the Alliance with attempting to create a national political movement based on new values.<ref name=Lipnack /> A pair of political theorists said the Alliance was one of the first groups attempting to create "a new synthesis" of [[Left-wing politics|left-wing]] and [[Right-wing politics|right-wing]] political ideas.<ref name=Spirit>McLaughlin, ''Spiritual'', p. 72–73.</ref> In a textbook, three political scientists identified the Alliance as a "precursor" of North American Greens.<ref name=Preface /> == Aftermath == [[File:Ciscosystemsheadquarters.jpg|thumb |upright=1.0 |right |alt=Long, low-rise, modernistic office building. |Alliance co-founder Gordon Feller later became "urban innovations" director at [[Cisco Systems]] in [[Silicon Valley]].<ref name=Feller />]] Many initial Governing Council members and other founders of the Alliance – often at the early stages of their careers<ref name=Paulson /> – engaged in transformation-oriented activities after the Alliance dissolved in 1983.{{refn|The names of 39 early GC members and five additional founding members are on the "Governing Council" page of the Alliance's political platform.<ref name=GC /> These are the only founders named in this section, except for Joseph Simonetta, who is identified as a founder in a reference below.|group=nb}} Some of them contributed to transformational theory and practice for many decades. In 1984, at least nine people associated with the Alliance were among the 62 people in attendance at the invitation-only [[History of the Green Party of the United States|founding meeting of the U.S. Green Party movement]] in St. Paul, Minnesota.<ref name=Green /> In addition, the Alliance's platform circulated there.<ref>[[Howie Hawkins|Howard Hawkins]], "[https://web.archive.org/web/20160919170807/https://s3.amazonaws.com/xlsuite_production/assets/10435353/VOL_23_01.pdf North American Greens Come of Age: Statism vs. Municipalism]." ''Our Generation'', vol. 23, no. 1, Winter 1992, p 74. Retrieved August 7, 2016.</ref> One former GCer, [[Mark Satin]], was later credited with helping to initiate that meeting,<ref>John Ely, "Green Politics in the United States and Europe," in Margit Mayer and John Ely, eds., ''The German Greens: Paradox Between Movement and Party'', Temple University Press, 1998, p. 200. {{ISBN|978-1-56639-516-8}}.</ref> and in a scholarly book on the early U.S. Greens, [[Ecofeminism|ecofeminist]] author [[Greta Gaard]] concluded that Satin "played a significant role in facilitating the articulation of Green political thought," and that his political philosophy influenced the Greens' "ideological foundation."<ref>Greta Gaard, ''Ecological Politics: Ecofeminists and the Greens'', Temple University Press, 1998, pp. 142–43. {{ISBN|978-1-56639-569-4}}.</ref> Other former Alliance members helped organize other transformation-oriented political initiatives. For example, GC members [[Corinne McLaughlin]] and Stephen Woolpert helped develop the Ecological and Transformational Politics Section (section #26) of the [[American Political Science Association]],<ref name=Preface /><ref name=Spirit /> Leonard Duhl helped initiate the Healthy Cities program at the [[World Health Organization]],<ref>Howard Frumkin et al., "Introduction," in Andrew L. Dannenberg, Howard Frumkin, and Richard J. Jackson, eds., ''Healthy Places: Designing and Building for Health, Well-being, and Sustainability'', Island Press, 2011, p. 26. {{ISBN|978-1-59726-727-4}}.</ref> and Alanna Hartzok co-founded the Earth Rights Institute.<ref>Alanna Hartzok, ''The Earth Belongs to Everyone: Articles & Essays'', Institute for Economic Democracy Press, 2008, p. 340. {{ISBN|978-1-933567-04-4}}.</ref> Some Alliance founders later ran for seats in the [[United States Congress|U.S. Congress]], though none won. In 1986, Joseph Simonetta – co-founder of an Alliance chapter<ref name=Simonetta /> – obtained the [[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic Party]] nomination for a [[United States House of Representatives|House]] seat.<ref name=Simonetta>Mark Satin, "[http://www.radicalmiddle.com/income.pdf Simonetta: The Heroes Are Us]," ''New Options Newsletter'', issue no. 29, June 30, 1986, pp. 3, 8. Retrieved March 25, 2016.</ref>{{refn|Simonetta ran on the slogan "The Heroes Are Us"; his campaign literature spoke of the dangers of "excessive consumption" and "immediate gratification." His campaign logo consisted of a world map crossed by two lines – "symbolic of the fact," he said, "that we live in an interrelated, interdependent world."<ref name=Simonetta />|group=nb}} Six years later, former GC member John McClaughry obtained the [[Republican Party (United States)|Republican Party]] nomination for a [[United States Senate|Senate]] seat.<ref>[[Michael Barone (pundit)|Michael Barone]] and Grant Ujifusa, ''The Almanac of American Politics 1994'', National Journal, 1993, p. 1295. {{ISBN|978-0-89234-057-6}}.</ref> In 2001, former GCer Alanna Hartzok obtained the [[Green Party of the United States|Green Party]] nomination for a House seat,<ref>Elly Spinweber, "[https://web.archive.org/web/20240908063653/https://www.psucollegian.com/archives/article_f3cd90bd-764e-53a9-8b1f-f670ce6a801e.html Green Party Candidate Addresses 'Earth Rights']," ''[[The Daily Collegian]]'' (Pennsylvania State University), April 19, 2001, p. 2. Retrieved March 25, 2016.</ref> and in 2014 she obtained the Democratic Party nomination for that same seat.<ref>Author unknown, "[https://ballotpedia.org/Alanna_Hartzok Alanna Hartzok]," Ballotpedia: The Encyclopedia of American Politics, website, no fixed date. Retrieved March 25, 2016.</ref> [[File:John McClaughry.png |thumb |upright=0.8 |right |alt=Head shot of white-haired, serious-looking male. |Alliance co-founder [[John McClaughry]] later co-authored a book about small-scale democracy.<ref name=McClaughry /> (Photo by ORCA Media.)]] Several Alliance founders later took transformational ideas into the [[Multinational corporation|multinational corporate]] world. James Ogilvy co-founded the [[Global Business Network]] to introduce [[Futures studies|futures thinking]] and [[scenario planning]] to multinational corporations.<ref>[[Peter Schwartz (futurist)|Peter Schwartz]], ''The Art of the Long View: Planning for the Future in an Uncertain World'', Currency Doubleday, 1996, pp. 92–95. {{ISBN|978-0-385-26732-8}}.</ref> Marc Sarkady became a global [[Management consulting|management consultant]] explicitly committed to "organizational transformation" and "visionary leadership";<ref>Gottlieb, ''Do You Believe'', p. 340.</ref> one of his earliest challenges was trying to build teamwork among [[General Motors]] executives.<ref>[[Paul Ingrassia (journalist)|Paul Ingrassia]] and Joseph B. White, ''Comeback: The Fall and Rise of the American Automobile Industry'', Touchstone / Simon & Schuster, 1994, pp. 173–74, 175. {{ISBN|978-0-671-79214-5}}.</ref> Malon Wilkus, an [[intentional community]] activist while on the GC,<ref name=GC /> eventually became head of American Capital Strategies and won praise in a book devoted to "creative inside reformers."<ref>[[Arthur B. Shostak]], ed., ''For Labor's Sake: Gains and Pains as Told by 28 Creative Inside Reformers'', University Press of America, 1994, p. 107. {{ISBN|978-0-8191-9775-7}}.</ref> Richard B. Perl founded an international investment company helping Japanese investors do [[environmentally friendly]] real estate development in the U.S.<ref name=Cheney>Dina Cheney, "[https://web.archive.org/web/20081022191932/http://www.college.columbia.edu/cct_archive/jan_feb07/updates1.php Richard Perl '79: Saving the World, One Bonbon at a Time]". ''Columbia College Today'', January / February 2007, p. 63. A publication of [[Columbia University]]. Retrieved 17 February 2018.</ref> He also partnered with a French chocolate manufacturer.<ref name=Cheney />{{refn|Perl also became one of five key leaders of the [[Social Venture Network]], an organization incubating socially responsible businesses.<ref>[[Jeffrey Hollender]] and Bill Breen, ''The Responsibility Revolution: How the Next Generation of Businesses Will Win'', Jossey-Bass, 2010, p. 203. {{ISBN|978-0-470-55842-3}}.</ref>|group=nb}} [[James Benson|Jim Benson]] founded innovative computer and space firms, including [[SpaceDev]].<ref name=Sullivan>Patricia Sullivan, "[https://web.archive.org/web/20160112084950/https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/10/15/AR2008101503271.html Obituaries: James Benson; Inventor Led Computer, Space Firms]", ''The Washington Post'', October 16, 2008. Retrieved July 30, 2017.</ref> Gordon Feller became director of "urban innovations" at [[Cisco Systems]], a multinational technology company.<ref name=Feller>Kim Chandler McDonald, ''Flat World Navigation: Collaboration and Networking in the Global Digital Economy'', Kogan Page, 2015, p. xv. {{ISBN|978-0-7494-7393-8}}.</ref> One year after the Alliance dissolved, two former GC members launched transformation-oriented periodicals, Eric Utne with ''[[Utne Reader]]''<ref name=Chu>Dan Chu and Margaret Nelson, "[https://web.archive.org/web/20100928121258/http://www.people.com/people/archive/article/0,,20118662,00.html Eric Utne Created the Impossible]," ''[[People (magazine)|People]]'' magazine, vol. 34, no. 10, September 10, 1990, pp. 79, 81.</ref> and [[Mark Satin]] with ''New Options Newsletter''.<ref>Jeff Rosenberg, "Mark's Ism: New Options' Editor Builds a New Body Politic," ''[[Washington City Paper]]'', vol. 9, no. 11, March 17, 1989, pp. 6–8.</ref> One futurist described ''New Options'' as a "successor" to the Alliance's newsletter.<ref>Michael Marien, "New Options for America," ''Future Survey'', vol. 13, no. 7, July 1991, item 01-315. A publication of the [[World Future Society]].</ref> While these periodicals did not please some critics, such as conservative scholar [[George Weigel]],<ref>George Weigel, "No Options," ''American Purpose'' magazine, vol. 3, no. 3, March 1989, pp. 21–22.</ref> others found them rewarding.{{refn|Cultural critic Annie Gottlieb stated in 1987 that ''Utne Reader'' and ''New Options'' were among "our generation's most characteristic creations right now, and the networks through which we talk to one another."<ref>Gottlieb, ''Do You Believe'', p. 371.</ref>|group=nb}} Many Alliance founders wrote transformation-oriented political books after the Alliance dissolved.{{refn|This recitation of books is intended to be suggestive rather than complete. For that reason, it is limited to one post-1983, transformation-oriented book per Alliance founder. Because GCers Davidson and McLaughlin are joint authors, two of their books are given.|group=nb}} These addressed a variety of traditional and emerging subjects, including [[Intentional community|intentional communities]],<ref>Corinne McLaughlin and Gordon Davidson, ''Builders of the Dawn: Community Lifestyles in a Changing World'', Stillpoint Publishing, 1985. {{ISBN|978-0-913299-20-3}}. Both authors were GC members.</ref> work and health,<ref>Clement Bezold and Rick Carlson, ''The Future of Work and Health'', Praeger Publishers, 1985. {{ISBN|978-0865690882}}. Bezold was the GC member.</ref> [[bioregionalism]],<ref>Kirkpatrick Sale, ''Dwellers in the Land: The Bioregional Vision'', Sierra Club Books, 1985. {{ISBN|978-0-87156-847-2}}.</ref> [[futures studies]],<ref>Michael Marien ad Lane Jennings, eds., ''What I Have Learned: Thinking About the Future Then and Now'', Praeger Publishers, 1987. {{ISBN|978-0313250712}}. Marien was the GC member.</ref> the interconnectedness of global issues,<ref>Melvin Gurtov, ''Global Politics in the Human Interest'', Lynne Rienner Publishers,1988. {{ISBN|978-1-58826-484-8}}.</ref> small-scale [[participatory democracy]],<ref name=McClaughry>[[Frank M. Bryan]] and John McClaughry, ''The Vermont Papers: Recreating Democracy on a Human Scale'', Chelsea Green Publishing, 1989. {{ISBN|978-0-930031-19-0}}. McClaughry was the GC member.</ref> [[social entrepreneurship]],<ref>Leonard J. Duhl, M.D., ''The Social Entrepreneurship of Change'', Pace University Press, 1991. {{ISBN|978-0-925776-04-4}}.</ref> [[Sustainable city|sustainable cities]],<ref>Sarah James and Torbjörn Lahti, ''The Natural Step for Communities: How Cities and Towns Can Change to Sustainable Places'', New Society Publishers, 2004. {{ISBN|978-0-86571-491-5}}. James was the GC member.</ref> [[Environmental technology|environmental technologies]],<ref>Robert Olson and David Rejeski, eds., ''Environmentalism & the Technologies of Tomorrow'', Island Press, 2004. {{ISBN|978-1-55963-769-5}}. Olson was the GC member.</ref> [[radical centrism]],<ref>Satin, ''Radical'', cited above.</ref> [[Land law|land rights]],<ref>Hartzok, ''The Earth Belongs'', cited above.</ref> [[transpartisan]]ship,<ref>[[Lawrence Chickering|A. Lawrence Chickering]] and James S. Turner, ''Voice of the People: The Transpartisan Imperative in American Life'', daVinci Press, 2008. {{ISBN|978-0-615-21526-6}}. Turner was the GC member.</ref> and spiritual politics.<ref>Corinne McLaughlin with Gordon Davidson, ''The Practical Visionary: A New World Guide to Spiritual Growth and Social Change'', 2010, Unity House Publishers, 2010. {{ISBN|978-0-87159-340-5}}. Both authors were GC members.</ref> One former GCer became lead editor of an academic textbook on transformational politics.<ref>Stephen Woolpert, Christa Daryl Slaton, and Edward W. Schwerin, eds., ''Transformational Politics: Theory, Study, and Practice'', State University of New York Press, 1998. {{ISBN|978-0-7914-3945-6}}.</ref> Some former GCers' transformational books were more personal. Bob Dunsmore wrote about being an activist for 40 years,<ref>Dunsmore, ''I Am'', cited above.</ref> James Ogilvy wrote about moving from goal-driven to soul-driven,<ref>James Ogilvy, ''Living Without a Goal: Finding the Freedom to Live a Creative and Innovative Life'', Currency Doubleday, 1995. {{ISBN|978-0-385-41799-0}}.</ref> Eric Utne exhorted readers to "Look Up, Look Out, Look In,"<ref>Eric Utne, ''Cosmo Doogood's Urban Almanac: Celebrating Nature & Her Rhythms in the City'', Cosmo's Urban Almanac, 2004. {{ISBN|978-0-9761989-0-1}}. The quoted phrase appears on the front cover.</ref> and Norie Huddle wrote a book explaining transformational ideas to children and others entitled simply ''Butterfly''.<ref>Norie Huddle, ''Butterfly'', Huddle Books, 1990. Art by Charlene Madland. {{ISBN|978-1-878690-00-5}}. A frontspage states, "a tiny tale of great transformation."</ref> == See also == * [[Futures studies]] * [[Green politics]] * [[Humanistic psychology]] * [[Transformative social change]] * [[Transpartisan]] == Notes == {{Reflist|group="nb"}} == References == {{reflist|30em}} == Further reading == * [[Mark Satin]], ''Up From Socialism: My 60-Year Search for a Healing New Radical Politics'', Bombardier Books / Post Hill Press, distributed by Simon & Schuster, 2023. {{ISBN|978-1-63758-663-1}}. Chapters Five and Six present Alliance co-founder Satin's version of the organizing, life, and demise of the Alliance. == External links == === Primary sources === * "[http://www.radicalmiddle.com/new_world_all.htm A Different Kind of Political Organization]," c. 1980. Excerpts from the Alliance's introductory brochure. Retrieved April 26, 2016. * ''[http://www.radicalmiddle.com/Platform2.pdf A Transformation Platform: The Dialogue Begins]'', 1st ed., January 1981. Booklet, no ISBN assigned. The introduction claims that the document was reviewed by the entire Governing Council, and that nearly 200 additional people contributed to the individual subject areas. Retrieved April 26, 2016. * "[http://www.radicalmiddle.com/alliance.pdf New World Alliance Update]." Selected articles about the Alliance's goals, projects, and strategies from the Alliance's political newsletter. Retrieved April 26, 2016. * Former Governing Council Members of the New World Alliance, "[http://www.radicalmiddle.com/x_agony.htm Participants Agonize Over (and Draw Lessons From) the Death and Life of the First Transpartisan Political Organization]," ''Radical Middle Newsletter'', issue no. 114, January 2008. A quarter century after the Alliance dissolved, 15 former GC members attempted to assess it. The titles of some of their contributions convey the range of their views – "We Had It Down 30 Years Ago" (Bob Olson), "We Blew It" (Mark Satin), "We Chose the Comfort of the Armchair" (Alanna Hartzok), "We Weren't Willing to Play the Right Game" (Miller Hudson), "We Had an Unprofessional Attitude, Especially About Money" (Neal H. Hurwitz), "We May Have Been Too Personally / Psychologically Diverse" (Melvin Gurtov), "We Never Found a Leader" (John McClaughry), "Some of Us Weren't Ready" (Sarah James), "The Larger Polity Was Not Ready" (Richard B. Perl), "We Are Nodes of a Life-Giving Net Now" (Bethe Hagens). Retrieved April 1, 2016. * [https://librarysearch.temple.edu/catalog/991029852229703811 New World Alliance and New Options: Correspondence Files, 1977–1992], in the [https://web.archive.org/web/20171106201050/https://library.temple.edu/scrc/contemporary-culture Contemporary Culture Collection] at Temple University Libraries, Philadelphia. Includes hundreds of letters among Alliance members. Also contains the Alliance's founding documents, minutes of GC and regional meetings, and a complete set of ''Renewal'' newsletters. Retrieved October 22, 2025. === Other links === * "[https://web.archive.org/web/20191029021813/https://www.ahpweb.org/images/stories/archive_pdfs/1980/May1980.pdf Special Issue: A Report on AHP's 12-Hour Political Party]," ''AHP Newsletter'', May 1980. Publication of the [[Association for Humanistic Psychology]]. GC member [[Mark Satin]] and four sponsors of the Alliance's newsletter were featured speakers at this event, and the ensuing manifesto by [[George Leonard]], on pp. 5–7 of this issue, is an early and explicit statement of transformational politics. Retrieved April 1, 2016. * Donald Keys, "[https://web.archive.org/web/20180711021842/http://www.ahpweb.org/images/stories/archive_pdfs/1980/December1980.pdf Planetary Citizenship: The Next Big Step]," ''AHP Newsletter'', December 1980, pp. 18–19. A publication of the [[Association for Humanistic Psychology]]. Prominent GC members Donald Keys and Martha Keys were co-directors of the Planetary Citizens organization, the subject of this article. * Frank Feather, ed., ''[https://archive.org/details/through80sthinki00feat Through the '80s: Thinking Globally, Acting Locally]'', [[World Future Society]] (WFS) publication, 1980. {{ISBN|978-0-930242-11-4}}. According to a WFS booklet ("First Global Conference on the Future," 1980, items #3111 and 3711), six GC members spoke at the 1980 WFS conference where these papers, many of them transformation-oriented, were presented. Retrieved April 1, 2016. {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:New World Alliance}} [[Category:American organizations established in 1979]] [[Category:1983 disestablishments in the United States]] [[Category:American democracy activists]] [[Category:Defunct American political movements]] [[Category:Human Potential Movement]] [[Category:New Age organizations]] [[Category:Organizations disestablished in 1983]] [[Category:Political advocacy groups in the United States]] [[Category:Social movement organizations]]
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