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time

Will the passing of 1.5 degrees see the end of cruel optimism?

By Rupert Read, Marc Lopatin, Resilence.org

‘The public gets what the public wants’ sang a young Paul Weller on the 1979 hit Going Underground. It’s a lyric that doubles as our one-line summary of this week’s major report by the world’s leading climate scientists.

  • April 8, 2022
points Tierra del Fuego

Declared Extinct, the Yaghan Rise in the Land of Fire

By Jude Isabella, Katrina Pyne, Hakai Magazine

  • April 8, 2022
Regional government in Northeast Syria

The Federalist Principle in Castoriadis’ Project of Direct Democracy

By Yavor Tarinski, Towards Autonomy

  • April 8, 2022

LATEST ARTICLES

Limits to Growth cover

Post-capitalism by design not disaster: A Grassroots Theory of Change (Part V of Eco Civilisation)

By Samuel Alexander, The Simplicity Institute

Capitalism has various growth imperatives that are inconsistent with environmental limits. That is, capitalism must grow for stability but cannot grow limitlessly on a finite planet. It follows that the future will be post-capitalist – by design or disaster.

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Scientists Rebellion

Dozens Arrested as Scientists Worldwide Mobilize to Demand ‘Climate Revolution’

By Jake Johnson, Common Dreams

What organizers described as "the world's largest-ever scientist-led civil disobedience campaign" kicked off just days after the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) released its latest report detailing the grim state of efforts to limit global warming to 1.5°C by century's end, a target set by the Paris accord.

Beating the Clock: A review of ‘Four Thousand Weeks’ and ‘Breaking Things at Work’

By Tom Smith, Degrowth.de

Returning to the Great Resignation mentioned at the opening of this piece, it is clear that deep discontent with work, production and our relationship to our own finite time have never been more relevant.

Sledding in MA

Building a culture of health in the era of climate change

By Samantha Hamilton, Environmental Health News

Live Well Springfield offers an innovative model of the future direction of multi-sector climate justice coalitions. Indeed, the Coalition will share its work with other public health professionals at the 2022 National Network for Public Health Institute Conference.

New Harmony

Localism, Intentionality, and Utopia (Socialist or otherwise)

By Russell Arben Fox, In media res

There is an accusation which has been flung over the decades (if not centuries) at practically every sort of intentional community-building effort, thus oddly discovering something which apparently entirely disparate elements of the right and left have in common.

community garden

Green Haven Project is nurturing underserved communities one garden at a time

By Monée Fields-White, Shareable

Three years ago, Jorge Palacios, David Roper and Josh Placeres came together with a shared vision to make a better world for communities of color in Miami. They wanted to create a space where Black and Brown families can access fresh produce and learn how to live a healthy lifestyle.

Pine forest in Ukraine

The Environmental Cost of the War in Ukraine

By Dmytro Averin, Freek van der Vet, Iryna Nikolaieva, Nickolai Denisov, Green European Journal

War always pollutes the environment, especially when it damages hazardous industries. Between 2014 and 2022, the conflict in Donbas in eastern Ukraine, a heavily industrialised region, has presented significant risks to the environment and public health of people living in the area.

Episode 51

A Load of Papal Bull: Greenlighting Colonization and the Mindset of Extraction (Episode 51 of Crazy Town)

By Asher Miller, Rob Dietz, Jason Bradford, Resilience.org

As seafaring colonizers divvied up the world and justified their actions using the Doctrine of Discovery, the era of land-grabbing imperialism led to outrageous exploitation of Indigenous peoples and ecosystems.

NEC poster

Three Things I Learned from Collaboratively Launching the 2021 Black Solidarity Economy Fund

By Symone Jackson, Post-Growth Institute

Imagine how much more capital can be directed into radical Black-led worker-owned cooperatives, community land trusts, and other solidarity economy organizations if this work is sustained and continuously invested in over the years.

energy prices

Energy bills: why yours is now so expensive, and where all the money goes

By Sara Walker, The Conversation

Energy prices in the UK have soared thanks to a big rise in the price cap for domestic customers set by regulator Ofgem. This follows a smaller increase in the price cap in October 2021.

Darfur refugee camp

We must turn solidarity with Ukraine into the new normal for all refugees

By Nicolas Haeringer, Waging Nonviolence

Decisions to support the Ukrainian people and target Russian interests show that anyone saying “there’s no alternative,” “we can’t welcome all refugees,” “we can’t tax billionaires because it’s too complex” or “it’s not possible to divest from fossil fuels” is actually lying, for the sake of defending their own personal interests.

Exxon refinery

ExxonMobil Announces $10 Billion Oil Investment the Same Day IPCC Signals End for Fossil Fuels

By Sharon Kelly, DeSmog Blog

“Some government and business leaders are saying one thing – but doing another,” UN Secretary-General António Guterres said. “Simply put, they are lying. And the results will be catastrophic.”

EDITOR’S PICKS

Upstream podcast

Our struggles are your struggles: stories of Indigenous resistance and regeneration

By Robert Raymond, Shareable

Standing Rock was a pivotal moment in regards to Indigenous resistance — but it was just one in a long line of battles that Indigenous peoples have been fighting against the twin forces of colonialism and capitalism since first contact.

redwoods

A Meditation on The Overstory

By Eliza Daley, By my solitary hearth

What would cause a person to separate humans from all other forms of life? It’s illogical to the extreme.

ONLINE COURSE

people, nature

Think Resilience Course

By Richard Heinberg, Post Carbon Institute

Think Resilience Lesson 16: Globalization

By Richard Heinberg, Post Carbon Institute

Think Resilience Lesson 6: Political & Economic Management

By Richard Heinberg, Resilience.org

Think Resilience Lesson 5: Pollution

By Richard Heinberg, Resilience.org

FEATURED RESOURCES

book cover

The Mushroom at the End of the World: On the Possibility of Life in Capitalist Ruins

By Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing, Princeton University Press

What a rare mushroom can teach us about sustaining life on a fragile planet.

  • Book Icon
book cover

Reclaiming Your Community

By Majora Carter, Penguin Random House

How can we solve the problem of persistent poverty in low-status communities? Majora Carter argues that these areas need a talent-retention strategy, just like the ones companies have.

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MORE ARTICLES

wheat

Ukraine: Putin’s Lebensraum

By Brian Czech, Center for the Advancement of a Steady State Economy

At this point in history, war is inevitable as long as nations are determined to grow their economies. Economic growth starts at the trophic base; that is, with agricultural surplus. In other words, a bigger economy requires more lebensraum.

insulation

Law forcing energy companies to insulate UK homes runs out as bills soar

By Caroline Molloy, Open Democracy

Tens of thousands of Britain’s poorest energy customers could miss out on a chance to bring their bills down before winter – because the government allowed its flagship insulation scheme to run out.

open access pusblishers

The Radical Open Access Collective: Building Better Knowledge Commons

By David Bollier, David Bollier blog

The Radical Open Access Collective is one of the key forces trying to show how commoning in scientific and scholarly publishing can actually work.

A Small Farm Future

A note on land value tax

By Chris Smaje, Small Farm Future

So while an LVT might be a slight improvement on the present situation, I can’t get hugely excited about proposals to end human misery either through an LVT charged by the central state or through overthrowing the centralized state to create … another centralized state.

mining

Easier said than done: National self-sufficiency in a changed world

By Kurt Cobb, Resource Insights

National self-sufficiency has suddenly become important in the wake of the geopolitical earthquake created by the Russian/Ukrainian conflict. But it will be far harder to achieve than many people think.

e-waste burning

The toxic cloud called ‘Internet’

By Bart Hawkins Kreps, An Outside Chance

“If we’re fortunate,” Crary dares to hope, “a short-lived digital age will have been overtaken by a hybrid material culture based on both old and new ways of living and subsisting cooperatively.”

See More

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Jody Tishmack

Jody has a Bachelors Degree in Geology, a Masters Degree in Soil Science and a Ph.D. in Civil Engineering. She developed a composting and soil manufacturing process at Purdue University in 1996, which has grown into a commercial business called...

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Resilience is a program of Post Carbon Institute, a nonprofit organization dedicated to helping the world transition away from fossil fuels and build sustainable, resilient communities.


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