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Glossary›Community Agreement

Glossary

Community Agreement

Co-created guidelines that establish how participants will interact at gatherings, workshops, and retreats—creating safer, more intentional containers for connection.

What is Community Agreement?

A Community Agreement is a set of collectively established behavioral guidelines that participants create together at the outset of gatherings, workshops, retreats, and events. Unlike top-down rules imposed by organizers, Community Agreements are co-created frameworks that answer the foundational question: “How do we want to be together?” They establish shared expectations for interaction, communication, and mutual respect, forming what practitioners call a “container”—an intentional energetic and social space that supports vulnerability, authentic expression, and collective transformation.

In the context of conscious and spiritual gatherings, Community Agreements serve multiple functions: they redistribute responsibility for group dynamics from facilitator to all participants, establish psychological safety for deeper work, provide language for addressing conflict when it arises, and signal the intentional difference between ordinary social interaction and sacred gathering space. Common elements include principles like “speak from your own experience,” “step up, step back” (balancing airtime), “what’s shared here stays here” (confidentiality), and “trust the process.”

Origins & Lineage

The modern practice of Community Agreements draws from multiple historical streams. Indigenous peoples worldwide have long used circle practices and consensus-based decision-making that included explicit agreements about how to gather—from Anishinaabek talking circles to the Haudenosaunee Great Law of Peace. These traditions emphasized collective wisdom, reciprocal listening, and shared responsibility for community wellbeing.

The contemporary facilitation movement began formalizing “ground rules” in the 1970s and 1980s through organizational development and conflict resolution work. The shift from “ground rules” to “community agreements” or “group agreements” gained momentum in the 1990s and 2000s, influenced by restorative justice practices, feminist facilitation theory, and anti-oppression organizing. The first victim-offender mediation program occurred in Canada in 1974, and restorative justice circles—rooted in indigenous practices—emerged as formal programs through the 1980s and 1990s, particularly in New Zealand and Australia.

By the early 2000s, organizations like the National Equity Project, Seeds for Change (UK), and Training for Change were codifying participatory methods for creating agreements. The term “Community Agreement” became preferred over “ground rules” because it emphasized consent, co-creation, and collective ownership rather than compliance with imposed regulations. Within spiritual and transformational communities—including the Burning Man culture, intentional communities, Buddhist sanghas, and the broader “conscious community” movement—these practices were adapted to support deeper inner work, emotional processing, and spiritual exploration.

How It’s Practiced

Creating Community Agreements typically occurs in the opening moments of a gathering, though some facilitators introduce them before entering emotionally charged territory. The process varies but generally follows this arc:

Co-creation methods range from facilitators proposing a starter list that participants can modify, to groups building agreements from scratch by naming individual needs, to hybrid approaches. Effective facilitators allow 30-45 minutes for groups working together long-term, and 5-10 minutes for shorter workshops. Participants might work in pairs, share in circle, or use silent reflection before voicing needs.

Common agreement themes include presence (“turn off phones,” “arrive on time”), brave space (“choose courage over comfort,” “welcome the unexpected”), generous listening (“seek to understand before being understood”), confidentiality (“Vegas rules” or “take the learning, leave the names”), equity of voice (“step up if you’re quiet, step back if you’re talkative”), assume best intentions (though this is contested), and “ouch/educate” (signal when hurt, but be willing to explain).

Living the agreements means displaying them visibly throughout the event, referencing them when positive behavior occurs (“I noticed how Zara really embodied curiosity”), and invoking them for course correction when needed. Participants, not just facilitators, hold authority to remind the group. Some gatherings revisit agreements mid-event to assess what’s working and adjust as the group evolves.

Community Agreement Today

In 2026, Community Agreements are standard practice across conscious festivals, spiritual retreats, transformational workshops, somatic trainings, men’s and women’s circles, psychedelic integration groups, and racial healing spaces. They appear at events from week-long silent meditation retreats to weekend ecstatic dance gatherings to online courses in embodiment practices.

Organizations like the Esalen Institute, Kripalu Center, and 1440 Multiversity incorporate them into residential programs. Conscious festivals—Symbiosis, Lightning in a Bottle, Envision—publish community agreements as part of registration. Facilitators trained through schools like the Art of Hosting, Strozzi Institute, or the Presencing Institute learn agreement-setting as foundational skill.

Online platforms adapted the practice for virtual gatherings during and after the 2020 pandemic, with agreements like “arrive on mute,” “use chat generously,” and “honor your own needs for breaks.” The practice has also spread into progressive workplaces, DEI (Diversity, Equity, Inclusion) trainings, and civic dialogue initiatives, though these contexts often retain the term “ground rules.”

Common Misconceptions

Community Agreements are not legally binding contracts or comprehensive codes of conduct. They do not replace event policies on harassment, substance use, or safety—those remain the organizer’s responsibility to enforce. Agreements cannot guarantee safety, only “safer” or “braver” space; the language of “safe space” has been critiqued for being impossible to deliver, especially for people with marginalized identities.

Agreements like “assume good intentions” or “trust each other” have been identified as potentially harmful in contexts where participants have experienced discrimination or trauma—you cannot mandate trust, and intent does not erase impact. Effective facilitators acknowledge power dynamics,历史harm, and the limits of what agreements can accomplish.

Community Agreements are also not performative rituals to rush through. Simply reading a list aloud does not create buy-in. The process of co-creation—discussing needs, negotiating language, securing genuine consent—is where the container actually forms. Skipping this process undermines the entire purpose.

Finally, agreements are aspirational, not punitive. They name how a group wants to show up, not rules for punishment. Violations are opportunities for learning and repair, not banishment (except in cases of serious harm requiring organizer intervention).

How to Begin

To experience Community Agreements firsthand, attend any workshop or retreat that advertises itself as “trauma-informed,” “restorative,” or “circle-based.” Look for facilitators trained in modalities like Authentic Relating, Circling, Council practice, or Non-Violent Communication. Organizations like the Mankind Project, Women’s Quest, or local men’s/women’s circles typically begin gatherings this way.

For facilitators learning the practice, consult resources from Seeds for Change (groupwork guides), Training for Change (facilitation curricula), National Equity Project (equity-centered protocols), or read The Art of Gathering by Priya Parker (though it doesn’t use this exact term). The International Institute for Restorative Practices offers research and training. Online, the blog Facilitation Mindset and Facilitate Better newsletter provide contemporary perspectives and templates.

Begin simply: at your next gathering, ask “What does everyone need to feel able to participate fully?” Write down what people share. Display it. Reference it when someone embodies it well. Notice what shifts.

Related terms

sacred containerholding spacecircle practicerestorative justicefacilitationbrave space
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