As A New Farm Bill Nears, Congress Should Consider Agrivoltaics
Agrivoltaics is an emerging dual-use approach where land both generates power from solar panels and maintains agricultural production.
Agrivoltaics is an emerging dual-use approach where land both generates power from solar panels and maintains agricultural production.
Either we stop global warming, or global warming stops us. “Sustainable socioeconomic development” is no longer on the menu.
While a positivist science is often privileged in research, agroecology implies the mobilisation of different kinds of knowledges that reflect the multiple dimensions of agroecology as a science, practice and social movement.
What can be said about globalized tech when our earthly existence is consumed by viral uncertainties, urgent climatic shifts, and perpetual socio-environmental precarity and violence?
For families who can’t pay high upfront costs for solar energy, cooperatives offer a solution.
In this podcast, Affiliate Post Growth Fellow, Djémilah Hassani, speaks to Social & Solidarity Economy leaders from French overseas territories — from the Indian Ocean to South America — to explore how these small nations are making an outsize contribution to the development of an an “economy of dignity”, leveraging collaborations, innovations, and existing cultural practices to pioneer pathways towards economic reconciliation.
This post has been taken down at the request of Mr. Aaron Vandiver, who has communicated to us that there are several unsubstantiated statements about him in the article. In particular, he wants it made known that he has no association with any representatives of the fossil fuel industry and has never received any money from them in relation to any of his work or publications. The co-editors at Resilience.org apologise for any distress that may have arisen from the publication of this article and have thus retracted its publication.
As conflict rages around them, Ukrainian conservationists persevere in restoring the Danube Delta, one of Europe’s most prized ecosystems.
Respecting the humanity and history of soil can help us grow a more resilient future for all.
Inspired by Kate Raworth’s pioneering book Doughnut Economics, Brandsberg-Engelmann instigated a collaborative project to create a comprehensive Regenerative Economics syllabus.
On this episode, Nate is joined by Peter Brannen, science journalist and author specializing in Earth’s prior mass extinctions, to unpack our planet’s geologic history and what it can tell us about our current climate situation.
Strengthening the capacity to meet basic needs closer to home will become a preoccupation for many and require a significant investment of time, energy, and resources. Strengthening personal, community, and ecological resilience close to home will only grow in importance.