Sunday, January 14, 2007

 

TIMEBANKIT Model no.5

TIME BANK MODEL : AGENCY TO CLIENT

Theory

Practice

Factors for Success

Potential Problems

Examples

Valley Kids, Wales: focus on working with young people to enable them to earn credits from being engaged in generating community improvements through the 'Give and Take' club


 

TIMEBANKIT Model no.4

TIME BANK MODEL : INSTITUIONAL TIME BANKING

Theory

Practice

Factors for Success

Potential Problems

Examples from London

Florence Nightingale School of Nursing and Midwifery 'Time and Talent' bank:

Currently in development this project would use the time banking tool to develop a pool of people who can exchanges expertise, extend and enhance the range and flexibility of programmes that the school can offer.


Thursday, January 11, 2007

 

TIMEBANKIT : model no.3

TIME BANK MODEL : ORGANISATIONAL TIME BANKING

Theory

Practice

Factors for Success

Potential Problems

Examples from London

Potentially: VAL's Health & Social Care Network


 

TIMEBANKIT : model no.2

TIMEBANK MODEL : AGENCY TO CLIENT (SPECIALIST TIME BANKING)

Theory

Practice

Factors for success

Potential Problems

Examples from London


 

TIMEBANKIT model no.1

TIMEBANK MODEL : NEIGHBOUR TO NEIGHBOUR

Theory

Practice

Factors for Success

Potential Problems

Examples from London


 

TIMEBANKIT information sheet no. 2

Core Values and Co-Production

The concept of time banking was developed through the work done by Edgar Cahn, an American civil rights lawyer and social justice activist. In the 1980s, he argued that alongside the conventional market economy, where money drives transactions, there is the non-market economy which we mostly take for granted. The non-market economy comprises all those vital social networks and activities in our communities that provide us with friends, family, a sense of belonging, safe neighbourhoods, care for others and personal value.

Time banking is one way of rebuilding and enhancing social networks and activities in the non-market economy. It's a tool that enables people to make that contribution to others that the non-market economy needs in order to function. Edgar Cahn's work outlines four core values that underpin time banking initiatives, these are:-

People are Assets -. The real wealth of any society is its people and everyone is valuable and has something to contribute.

Redefining Work - All work is valuable, whether paid or unpaid. Activites such as bringing up children, caring for people who are marginalized, contributing to and participating in the delivery of state services, keeping communities safe, fighting injustice and making democracy work have to be recognised, rewarded and counted as real work.

Reciprocity - both giving and receiving are important. We need each other and giving and receiving are the basic building blocks of positive social relationships and healthy communities.

Social Capital - Healthy communities have healthy social networks. Belonging to a mutually supportive and secure social network brings meaning to our lives, promotes health and wellbeing and provides new opportunites to rebuild our trust in one another.

Co-production is the term used to describe those reciprocal activities that patients, clients, service users and others undertake with professionals in order to produce an effective service. This moves away from the idea of the undervalued and passive individual who is the recipient of public services and who is percieved only in terms of their "needs" towards an approach which focuses on people as active creators of services with skills and assets. As such, co-production neatly links to time accreditation, one from of putting value to the vital work that people do in their communities. Time banking, as a form of time accredited co-production, is a tool which can enable the core values to be achieved.

 

TIMEBANKIT information sheet no. 1

WHAT IS TIMEBANKING?

Time banking is a community development tool that uses an alternative currency - time itself - to measure, reward and encourage mutual volunteering and participation in community activites.

Timebanking initiatives enable people to help each other in thier local community. For every hour you spend giving your skills to your community you are entitled to an hour's help in return.

People participate in time banking initiatives for the same reasons that they volunteer, because they want to make a difference, help others, feel valued or because they want to improve their skills, knowledge and experience for specific reasons.

Time banking unlocks the rich sources of time, skills, energy, wisdom and care that are already there in any community just waiting to be invested. Time banking is a tool that can be applied in a wide range of settings, from estates to health projects to youth services. A small neighbourhood time bank can be set up by an individual or by an organisation.

In the UK time banks have been embraced by community regeneration initiatives, voluntary sector organisations, health & social care agencies and a host of community entrepreneurs.

Community participation can include taking part in consultation exercises, attending healthy living events or taking a group of children to school. Time banking uses the term, "CO-PRODUCTION" to describe how the beneficiaries of a public service activity give their time to work in partnership with professionals in the design, planning and delivery of that service or activity. This time can be measured, accredited and rewarded via a time banking initiative. Active public involvement is a critical factor in the success of professional activity and should be understood and acknowledged as "work".

The potency of time banking to connect people is proven. The ways in which they can be used to reward participation and rebuild community have been explored but by no means exhausted.

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