Limits to Growth: An Update
The 1972 book, Limits to Growth, is the best-selling environmental book of all time, and deservedly so.
The 1972 book, Limits to Growth, is the best-selling environmental book of all time, and deservedly so.
A Simpler Way is a documentary about simple living, permaculture, and local economy as a response to global crises.
As I learned in graduate-school, the legitimate fear of change and the unknown expressed in each case is, more significantly, working at the same time to protect some form of unacknowledged and unseen privilege.
Put otherwise, based on my calculations, if the whole world came to look like one of our most successful ecovillages, we would still need one and a half planet’s worth of Earth’s biocapacity. Dwell on that for a moment.
Both the name and the theory of degrowth aim explicitly to repoliticize environmentalism.
Over the last week or so, I’ve heard from a remarkable number of people who feel that a major crisis is in the offing.
It’s time to wake back up and see if we are worthy to give it a go for another year.
Written by Finnish energy analysts Rauli Partanen, Harri Paloheimo and Heikki Waris, The World After Cheap Oil offers an exhaustive, up-to-date dissection of the world oil situation.
The theory is, less stuff coming in means less stuff going out.
Who now lives fully integrated with a clan, tribe, or other group ‘emplaced’ for many generations in a particular location and fully integrated into the ecology of that place?
More than an agricultural technology, permaculture is a vision of the societies of tomorrow, ours, which will be confronted with the evolution of energy and climate systems.
FULL engagement with transitioning asks us to recognize the power of goodness in others, our neighbors and most difficultly, to accept it in ourselves!