Friday, May 29, 2026

Webinar: "The Power of Respect Framework - Practical De-Escalation & Trauma-Informed Communication"

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The Power of Respect Framework™:
Practical De-Escalation and Trauma-Informed Communication in Libraries
Presented by Jeff Owens, CSP, CTM
Library 2.0 Service, Safety, and Security Webinar with Dr. Steve Albrecht

OVERVIEW

Libraries are public spaces where staff regularly interact with people experiencing stress, frustration, emotional crisis, mental health challenges, social isolation, and the effects of trauma. These interactions can quickly become tense, especially during policy enforcement or emotionally charged situations. At the same time, repeated exposure to difficult interactions can increase stress, frustration, and burnout among library staff.

This webinar presents how The Power of Respect Framework™ helps library staff apply trauma-informed principles in practical, everyday interactions with patrons. This is not a theoretical or academic presentation. Using the core concepts of Respect for Self, Respect for Others, and Respect for the Situation, participants will learn “real-world proven” communication and de-escalation strategies that reduce defensiveness, lower emotional escalation, improve cooperation, strengthen professional interactions, and help maintain safety and composure during difficult encounters.

Participants will leave with immediately usable techniques for defusing defensive escalation, managing their own emotional responses under pressure, communicating with empathic assertiveness, and setting respectful boundaries, without unintentionally intensifying conflict, helping to create a safer, calmer, and more respectful library environment for everyone.

LEARNING AGENDA

  • Understand why people engage in conflict behaviors.
  • Recognize and defuse early signs of escalation.
  • Use intentional communication to de-escalate tense situations.
  • Transcend conflict by rising above reaction and applying controlled influence.

DATE: Thursday, June 11th, 2026, 2:00 - 3:00 pm US - Eastern Time

COST:

  • $99/person - includes live attendance and any-time access to the recording and the presentation slides and receiving a participation certificate.
  • To arrange group discounts (see below), to submit a purchase order, or for any registration difficulties or questions, email admin@library20.com.

TO REGISTER: 

Click HERE to register and pay. You can pay by credit card. You will receive an email within a day with information on how to attend the webinar live and how you can access the permanent webinar recording. If you are paying for someone else to attend, you'll be prompted to send an email to admin@library20.com with the name and email address of the actual attendee.
 
If you need to be invoiced or pay by check, if you have any trouble registering for a webinar, or if you have any questions, please email admin@library20.com.


NOTE
: Please check your spam folder if you don't receive your confirmation email within a day.

SPECIAL GROUP RATES (email admin@library20.com to arrange):

  • Multiple individual log-ins and access from the same organization paid together: $75 each for 3+ registrations, $65 each for 5+ registrations. Unlimited and non-expiring access for those log-ins.
  • The ability to show the webinar (live or recorded) to a group located in the same physical location or in the same virtual meeting from one log-in: $299.
  • Large-scale institutional access for viewing with individual login capability: $499 (hosted either at Library 2.0 or in Niche Academy). Unlimited and non-expiring access for those log-ins.
12255199694?profile=RESIZE_180x180JEFF OWENS, CSP, CTM

Jeff Owens, CSP, CTM, delivers proven strategies to deal with high-stress conversations, increase connection, influence, and collaboration. He is based in Honolulu, Hawaii.

Jeff has served as a senior business leader for an international corporation where he led diverse teams to success and profitability. In 2002, Jeff founded Transcend Inc. to provide speaking, training, and advisory services using his signature Power of Respect Frameworktm to reduce and de-escalate negative conflict, enhance leadership influence, and build organizational cultures of respect and civility.

Jeff holds the certification “Certified Threat Manager” from the Association of Threat Assessment Professionals. He was awarded the Certified Speaking Professional (CSP) designation from the National Speakers Association, the highest global standard of excellence in professional speaking. He is a three-time Speakers Hall of Fame inductee.

12255199694?profile=RESIZE_180x180DR. STEVE ALBRECHT

Since 2000, Dr. Steve Albrecht has trained tens of thousands of library employees in 28+ states, live and online, in service, safety, security, and leadership. His programs for both staff and library leaders are fast, entertaining, and provide tools that can be put to use immediately in the library workspace. His books include:

The Library Leader’s Guide to Employee Coaching: Building a Performance Culture One Meeting at a Time (in-press, Bloomsbury, 2026)

The Library Leader’s Guide to Human Resources: Keeping it Real, Legal, and Ethical (Rowman & Littlefield, 2025)

The Safe Library: Keeping Users, Staff, and Collections Secure (Rowman & Littlefield, 2023)

Library Security: Better Communication, Safer Facilities (ALA, 2015)

Steve holds a doctoral degree in Business Administration (D.B.A.), an M.A. in Security Management, a B.S. in Psychology, and a B.A. in English. He is board-certified in HR, security management, employee coaching, and threat assessment. He has written 28 books on business, security, and leadership. He provides a loving home for four rescue dogs. 

More on The Safe Library at thesafelibrary.com. Follow on X (Twitter) at @thesafelibrary and on YouTube @thesafelibrary. Dr. Albrecht's professional website is drstevealbrecht.com.

 

OTHER UPCOMING EVENTS:

 June 2, 2026

 June 4, 2026

 June 5, 2026

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 June 12, 2026

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 June 16, 2026

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Thursday, May 28, 2026

How Conspiracies Actually Work: Addendum 1

Notes Since Publication of How Conspiracies Actually Work: A Better Map

The framework keeps producing explanations as I point it at new cases, which is, of course, what a working framework is supposed to do. These first notes collect thinking that arrived after the essay was finished. Each note points to where in the argument it belongs, and will eventually be integrated into the essay.

The mutual-misreading loop

The essay describes the denier and the conspiracy theorist as two figures who cannot hear each other, but it treats them too statically. They are not just two positional roles that happen to coexist. They generate each other, through a loop that runs as follows, and the loop belongs alongside the discussion of why the discourse oscillates.

Begin with what an institution is to the person inside it. The mind that staffs institutions evolved for the Paleolithic tribe, and the institution now occupies the slot the tribe used to fill. It is the thing whose acceptance the individual depends on, whose expulsion the individual fears, whose account of reality the individual defers to. So the institution inherits the full force of coalitional psychology, including the most consequential of its features: the capacity to justify the tribe's behavior even when that behavior is objectively bad by the tribe's own stated standards. This is the key move. It is not that the captured insider holds different values. It is that the insider holds the same values everyone else does and has developed an elaborate, sincere apparatus for explaining why the tribe's conduct does not really violate them. The justification feels like reasoning. It is coalitional defense wearing the clothes of reasoning.

The loop has three steps. First, the insider, defending the tribe through the justifying apparatus described above, genuinely cannot see the harm the tribe is producing, because seeing it would require turning the apparatus off, and the apparatus exists precisely to already be kept on. Second, someone outside the institution, not equipped with the insider's justifications, sees the coordinated behavior and its results plainly, and reads them as malice or intent to harm, because from outside, coordinated harm looks like a plan. Third, when the outsider accuses the insider of that intent, the insider knows with complete sincerity that no conscious harm was planned or attempted, and therefore experiences the accusation as paranoid, as conspiracy thinking, because the insider is blind to two things at once: the harm itself, and the way the tribe's justifications look to anyone standing outside them..

That is the engine under the oscillation, and the reason the camps entrench rather than converge. The denier is the insider running the justifying apparatus. The conspiracy theorist is the outsider reading coordination as intent. Each is responding accurately to what they can see, and each confirms the other's error by behaving exactly as the other's model predicts. The accusation of conspiracy thinking is not a debating tactic; it is what genuine blindness to one's own coalitional justifications feels like from the inside. Capture is what sits between the two readings, invisible to both, which is why naming it dissolves the loop that neither figure can escape on their own.

The guardrail: when the outsider is simply right

The loop above describes the capture case specifically, and left there it could be misread as an exoneration machine, a way of converting every accusation of intentional harm into a charitable story about sincere blindness. It is not, and the guardrail matters as much as the loop.

Sometimes the outsider is simply right. The Conspiracy quadrant is real. The intent is conscious, the coordination is deliberate, and "you're being paranoid" is a lie rather than a sincere blindness. The genuinely hard problem is that from the outside the two cases are often indistinguishable, because the captured-and-blind insider and the guilty-and-lying insider produce the identical response: that's conspiracy thinking. The captured insider says it because they cannot see the harm. The guilty insider says it because they can see the harm and want it hidden. The sentence comes out the same either way.

This is the deeper version of the CIA's inoculation use of "conspiracy theorist." The dismissal works not only as a deliberately planted weapon but because it also arises spontaneously and sincerely from the captured, who genuinely cannot see what they are being accused of. That is exactly what makes it so corrosive. "You're being conspiratorial" is what an innocent institution says, and what a captured one says, and what a guilty one says. Because it discriminates nothing, it can never count as evidence of innocence. The reflex to reach for it, however sincere it feels, tells you nothing about which of the three cases you are in.

The payoff: holding both truths at once

The reason all of this matters is that the framework is the only thing in the room that can hold the sincere truths simultaneously. Outside of actual conspiracy (intent and coordination), the insider's truth is that no one consciously planned the harm. The outsider's truth is that the harm is real and patterned. The binary forces a choice between these, and so each camp ends up denying the other's truth in order to protect its own. The framework refuses the choice. No one planned it, and the harm is real, and the cause is the structure rather than a villain. All three can be true together.

That is the actual way across the divide. Grant the insider the absence of a plan. Grant the outsider the reality of the harm. And refuse each the false inference they bolt onto their truth: the insider's inference that the absence of a plan means the absence of harm, and the outsider's inference that the reality of the harm means the presence of a plan. What remains, once both false inferences are stripped away, is Capture, and the guardrail keeps Conspiracy on the table for the cases where the outsider's harder inference turns out to be correct after all.

The recipient's double-bind

The vaccine section explains the institutions and the participants, but it leaves out the people the whole episode was about: the ordinary recipients, and why so many of them resist updating even as evidence of harm accumulates. The explanation is the same architecture operating at the highest possible personal stakes, and it belongs in that section.

Consider the parent who accepted the vaccine for a child, or while pregnant, in a moment of maximum fear and maximum desire to do the protective thing. Suppose evidence of risk later emerges. For that parent, accepting the evidence is not a neutral update. It requires accepting two propositions at once: that the trusted institution exploited her trust, and that she, in the moment when protecting her child was her deepest responsibility, failed to protect. The second proposition is nearly unbearable, because it converts an act of love into an act of harm she participated in. The psychological cost of holding it is so high that denial becomes the adaptive response, not because the parent is foolish or weak, but because the mind protects itself from a recognition that would be intolerable to carry.

This is shame operating as sabotage. Questioning the narrative no longer feels like evaluating a claim about a vaccine. It feels like self-accusation, like agreeing to indict oneself as a parent who failed at the one thing that mattered most. So the narrative gets defended with a fierceness that looks irrational from outside and is entirely intelligible from inside: the person is not protecting the institution, they are protecting themselves from a verdict they cannot survive rendering against themselves. The same cost-driven attention management the essay describes in institutional participants operates here too, but the stakes are not a career or a pension. They are a person's sense of themselves as a good parent, and there is almost nothing a mind will not do to keep that intact. Any account of why people went along has to extend this much generosity to the recipients, or it explains everyone except the people who were the point.