Location
Main Entry - Personal Name
Title Statement Designing regenerative cultures
Publication, Distribution, etc. (Imprint) Axminster, England : Triarchy Press, cop. 2016
Dewey Decimal Classification Number
SAB Classification Code
Physical Description
Bibliography, etc. Note Includes bibliographical references (pages 275-285).
Subject - Topical Term
ISBN
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This is a 'Whole Earth Catalog' for the 21st century: an impressive and wide-ranging analysis of what's wrong with our societies, organizations, ideologies, worldviews and cultures - and how to put them right. The book covers the finance system, agriculture, design, ecology, economy, sustainability, organizations and society at large. In this remarkable book, Daniel Wahl explores ways in which we can reframe and understand the crises that we currently face, and he explores how we can live our way into the future. Moving from patterns of thinking and believing to our practice of education, design and community living, he systematically shows how we can stop chasing the mirage of certainty and control in a complex and unpredictable world. The book asks how can we collaborate in the creation of diverse regenerative cultures adapted to the unique biocultural conditions of place? How can we create conditions conducive to life? *** "This book is a valuable contribution to the important discussion of the worldview and value system we need to redesign our businesses, economies, and technologies - in fact, our entire culture - so as to make them regenerative rather than destructive." --Fritjof Capra, author of The Web of Life, co-author of The Systems View of Life: A Unifying Vision *** "This is an excellent addition to the literature on ecological design and it will certainly form a keystone in the foundations of the new MA in Ecological Design Thinking at Schumacher College, Devon. It not only contains a wealth of ideas on what Dr Wahl has termed 'Designing Regenerative Cultures' but what is probably more important, it provides some stimulating new ways of looking at persistent problems in our contemporary culture and hence opens up new ways of thinking and acting in the future." -- Seaton Baxter OBE, Prof. in Ecological Design Thinking, Schumacher College, UK [Subject: Systems Thinking, Education, Social Anthropology, Environmentalism, Ecology, Regenerative Culture, Sociology]
Foreword p. 11 Foreword p. 13 Introduction p. 15 Living the Questions: Why change the narrative now? p. 19 Questioning dangerous ideologies p. 25 Facing complexity means befriending uncertainty and ambiguity p. 28 Caring for the Earth is caring for ourselves and our community p. 31 Wake up to find out that you are the eyes of the world p. 33 The 'why' will guide the 'what' and the 'how' p. 36 Spirituality, soul and solitude in nature p. 38 Sustainability as a learning journey: pilgrims and apprentices p. 40 Sustainability is not enough; we need regenerative cultures p. 43 Why choose transformative over sustaining innovation? p. 49 The Three Horizons of innovation and culture change p. 53 Evaluating disruptive innovation in the age of transition p. 57 Transformative innovation is about deep questioning p. 60 Sensitivity to scale, uniqueness of place and local culture p. 62 The transformative power of social innovation p. 64 Collaborative consumption and peer-to-peer collaboration p. 66 Facilitating systems innovation and culture change p. 67 Why do we need to think and act more systemically? p. 73 Believing is seeing and seeing is believing p. 76 The whole is more than the sum of its parts p. 79 From the 'crisis of perception' to the 'systems view of life' p. 81 Interbeing p. 85 How can we participate appropriately in complex systems? p. 87 The IFF World System Model p. 89 Learning to see nature everywhere p. 92 Being a process, and seeing in relationships p. 94 Why nurture resilience and whole-systems health? p. 97 Rolling back Earth Overshoot Day p. 99 Learning to live within planetary boundaries p. 101 What exactly are resilience and transformative resilience? p. 104 The adaptive cycle as a dynamic map for resilience thinking p. 107 Panarchy: a scale-linking perspective of systemic transformation p. 109 Local and regional community resilience building is going global p. 111 How can we nurture transformative resilience? p. 115 From control and prediction to conscious participation, foresight and anticipation p. 119 Why take a design-based approach? p. 123 Design education enables cultural transformation p. 124 Design is where theory and practice meet p. 129 Design follows worldview and worldview follows design p. 131 Ethics and design for regenerative cultures p. 132 Aesthetics and design p. 134 Emergence and design p. 136 Designing for positive emergence (a case study) p. 138 Scale-linking, salutogenic design for resilience p. 142 The resurgence of a culture of makers: re-localizing production p. 144 Collective visioning and design conversations change culture p. 147 How can we learn to better design as nature? p. 151 Ecoliteracy: Learning from living systems p. 154 Valuing traditional ecological knowledge and indigenous wisdom p. 157 How does life create conditions conducive to life? p. 163 Biologically inspired innovation p. 166 Green chemistry and material science p. 168 Biologically inspired product design p. 171 Biomimetic architecture p. 175 Nature's whole system optimization informs community design p. 178 Living the questions together creates community p. 180 Industrial ecology and symbiosis are closing the loops p. 183 Ecologically informed urban and regional planning p. 187 Why are regenerative cultures rooted in cooperation? p. 191 Redesigning agriculture for food sovereignty and subsidiarity p. 196 Regenerative agriculture: effective responses to climate change p. 199 Learning from and mimicking healthy ecosystems p. 203 Redesigning economics based on ecology p. 209 Creating circular economies p. 214 Towards a regenerative economy p. 218 Thriving communities and the solidarity economy p. 221 Shifting from quantitative to qualitative growth p. 224 Valuing the commons by cooperatively sharing the gifts of life p. 226 Earth Law: the enabling constraints of collective living p. 229 Life's collaborative lessons transform business p. 231 Co-creating regenerative enterprises p. 236 Collaboration and empathy as evolutionary success stories p. 240 Activism revisited: conscious participation and collective intelligence p. 246 We are coming back to life and this changes everything p. 252 Learning to listen deeply p. 255 Inner and outer resilience p. 259 Conclusion - Regenerative cultures are about thriving together p. 263 Acknowledgements p. 271 References p. 275 About the Author p. 286