Repair Without Contracts: A Relational Guide to Navigating Project Breakdowns in Micro-Utopias
Here is a Three-Part Training Guide for how groups in Solon Papageorgiou’s framework handle project breakdowns using relational design — instead of contracts, punishment, or hierarchy.
🛠️ Training Guide: Relational Repair for Collaborative Projects
Goal: Equip groups to handle breakdowns with care, clarity, and collaboration — using principles aligned with Solon Papageorgiou’s micro-utopian, post-contractual framework.
🔹 PART 1 — FOUNDATIONS OF RELATIONAL AGREEMENTS
🔍 1.1. Set Intentions, Not Contracts
Use spoken agreements in the presence of others (e.g. during a project circle).
Document intentions in a visible, evolving format — e.g. chalkboard walls, community pads, or shared digital logs.
Encourage mutual phrasing: ✅ “Here’s what I’m offering” vs ❌ “I promise to deliver by X or else.”
🤝 1.2. Build Commitments on Consent
Use questions like:
“What do you need in place to commit with confidence?”
“What might pull you away from this?”
Allow space for non-binary answers (e.g. “I’m 80% in with space to renegotiate”).
🧠 1.3. Normalize Renegotiation
Introduce “renegotiation signals”: phrases or icons anyone can use to pause, review, or revise an agreement without stigma.
🔹 PART 2 — WHEN BREAKDOWNS HAPPEN
🧭 2.1. Spot the Signs Early
Missed updates, silence, emotional withdrawal, or visible strain.
Have “gentle check-in” norms: ✅ “How are you feeling about this project lately?” ✅ “Is anything shifting for you?”
💬 2.2. Use the Relational Repair Circle
Invite all directly affected people — no judgment or pressure.
Hold space for:
Feelings: What emotions came up?
Needs: What does each person now need?
Context: What led to the breakdown?
💡 Facilitator Tip: Keep the focus on restoration, not blame.