Patterns of Commoning: A Journey Through Time to the Irrigation System in Valais, Switzerland
In Valais, Switzerland, a network of “artificial canals” was rediscovered in the 1980s.
In Valais, Switzerland, a network of “artificial canals” was rediscovered in the 1980s.
Hundreds of water protectors gathered in a solar-powered 200-foot geodesic dome nestled on the plains amid tipis and waited three hours to join a traditional Lakota dinner on Thanksgiving.
As our energy sources change, our economy will likely evolve and adapt—perhaps in surprising ways.
Americans are literally and figuratively in the driver’s seat of world oil consumption.
The bottom line is that if we’re smart and plan carefully, we can still increase food production and human equity across much of the world.
The question in these trials is straightforward: Do governments and corporations have an obligation to protect the habitability of the Earth’s climate for human populations?
Today there are compelling echos drawing social, environmental and spiritual movements into shared fields of understanding and activism.
I’m sorry to say that the phrase “peak oil,” familiar and convenient as it is, probably has to go.
Scroll through Donald Trump’s campaign promises or listen to his speeches and you could easily conclude that his energy policy consists of little more than a wish list drawn up by the major fossil fuel companies…
Clean coal.” “Ethical oil.” How could fossil fuels that produce pollution which sickens, kills, and hospitalizes tens of thousands of Americans each year end up sounding so … desirable?
If we have to be “punk as f*ck” to be part of this revolution, then many people I know doing phenomenal things wouldn’t be able to take part. And that’s a shame.
Carrying on from the previous post, here we share an experimental example of permaculture design when conducted explicitly as a process of differentiating a pre-existing whole into parts.