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Three
Myths About Partners
An
Interview with Riane Eisler
by Pam Krueger
Published in Fast Company, November 1998
A partnership expert gives the lowdown on dynamic duos.
Few people have thought as deeply about how partnerships work as social historian Riane Eisler. The cofounder and President of the Center for Partnership Studies, based in Pacific Grove, California, Eisler has devoted the past 30 years to developing and promoting the idea and the practice of partnership.
In books such as The Chalice and The Blade ( HarperCollins, 1988 ) and The Partnership Way ( Holistic Education Press, 1998, cowritten by David Loye ), Eisler argues that history is a struggle between two ways of structuring relationships: a "dominator model," which is stifling and authoritarian, and a "partnership model," which encourages creativity. She consults widely; her clients include some of the country's largest companies.
In an interview with Fast Company, Eisler discussed the three most common myths about partnership.
Myth
#1
Partnerships Don't Have Hierarchies.
"People often think that having a partnership means being
'nice.' It doesn't. There are hierarchies in a partnership, but they
are hierarchies of 'actualization' rather than domination. Conflict
isn't squashed. People are heard. Differences of opinion are
respected. In the dominator model, conflict is either repressed or
put down violently. People who are different are considered inferior
and are expected to submit to authority."
Myth
#2
Partnerships Always Require Consensus.
"Consensus can be a disaster. If one person unreasonably holds
up a decision, he or she, in effect, becomes a dominator.
"Partnerships are not completely flat organizations. They do have leaders - - but those leaders play multiple roles. They take turns assuming leadership for tasks where their knowledge and ability apply. They don't issue orders that people must obey without question; they inspire and facilitate."
Myth
#3
Partners Don't Compete.
"Competition exists in partnerships, but it isn't adversarial.
Instead, the emphasis is on achievement: People compete not to
destroy their rivals but to raise standards and to spur themselves
to excel. In the dominator paradigm, the point of life is to win and
to control. In a partnership, the idea is to create - - a much more
basic human desire.
"Of course, no society, business, or family conforms perfectly to the partnership model. Most of us have been brought up to see the dominator model as normal, so we struggle to shed its traditions and assumptions. Habits and patterns don't change overnight. But we are moving closer to the partnership model than ever before."
The Center for
Partnership Studies
P.O. Box 51936
Pacific Grove, CA 93950
USA
Phone 831-626-1004
Fax 831-626-3734
center@partnershipway.org