Azolla – Climate Foundation
Source: Azolla – Climate Foundation
Read More Azolla – Climate FoundationIt seems to me we have an Ecological Crisis and it will get worse
We can ignore it or pretend it isn’t happening
We can give up and spread doom
OR
We can cope with it, with love
Source: Azolla – Climate Foundation
Read More Azolla – Climate Foundation Group Facilitation on Societal Disruption and Collapse: Insights from Deep Adaptation
by Jem Bendell
1,* and Katie Carr
2
“Are you hopeful?” I ask.
Given that hope is a duty from which paleontologists are exempt, I’m surprised when he answers, “Yes, I am.”
Read More planetOfWeedsFrom Barbados to Finland, we’ve seen women’s leadership on climate bring fair, innovative and ambitious policies.
Read More Women are turning the tide on climate policy worldwide, and may launch a new era for Australia“The term collapsology is a neologism used to designate the transdisciplinary study of the risks of collapse of industrial civilization.[1] It is concerned with the “general collapse of societies induced by climate change, scarcity of resources, vast extinctions, and natural disasters.”[2] Although the concept of civilizational or societal collapse had already existed for many years, collapsology focuses its attention on contemporary, industrial, and globalized societies.”
Source: Collapsology – Wikipedia
Read More Collapsology – WikipediaResilience: what do we most value that we want to keep, and how?
Relinquishment: what do we need to let go of so as not to make matters worse?
Restoration: what could we bring back to help us with these difficult times?
Reconciliation: with what and whom shall we make peace as we awaken to our mutual mortality?
Each solution reduces greenhouse gases by avoiding emissions and/or by sequestering carbon dioxide already in the atmosphere. Source: Solutions | Project Drawdown
Read More Solutions | Project DrawdownA society based on natural ecology might seem like a far-off utopia—yet communities everywhere are already creating it.
Read More What an Ecological Civilization Looks Like:We are told that states and the dominion they impose, however dysfunctional and destructive they may be, are an inevitable and irreplaceable form of human organisation. Bookchin and those he has inspired help us to challenge this claim.
Read More Participatory Democracyhttps://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2017/apr/12/doughnut-growth-economics-book-economic-model In Doughnut Economics: Seven Ways to Think Like a 21st-Century Economist, Kate Raworth of Oxford University’s Environmental Change Institute reminds us that economic growth was not, at first, intended to signify wellbeing. Simon Kuznets, who standardised the measurement of growth, warned: “The welfare of a nation can scarcely be inferred from a measure of…
Read More Doughnut Economics