• Leading the transition to a more resilient, equitable, and sustainable world.

    Leading the transition to a more resilient, equitable, and sustainable world.

Latest posts

What Can Communities Do?

Resilience: What Can Communities Do?

Rob Hopkins

Community matters when we are looking for responses to peak oil and climate change because of the power that emerges from working together and creating meaningful change through shared action. In a world where social capital and a sense...

Growing Community Food Systems

Growing Community Food Systems

Erika Allen

The idea of a community food system is much larger than just urban farming. It deals with everything, all the components that are needed to establish, maintain, and perpetually sustain a civilization. Urban farming is key in the reclamation...

Population: The Multiplier of Everything Else

Population: The Multiplier of Everything Else

Bill Ryerson

When it comes to controversial issues, population is in a class by itself. Advocates and activists working to reduce global population growth and size are attacked by the Left for supposedly ignoring human-rights issues, glossing over Western overconsumption, or...

Nine Challenges of Alternative Energy

Nine Challenges of Alternative Energy

David Fridley

Unlike conventional fossil fuels, where nature provided energy over millions of years to convert biomass into energy-dense solids, liquids, and gases–requiring only extraction and transportation technolgy for us to mobilize them–alternative energy depends heavily on specially engineered equipment and...

Beyond the Limits to Growth

Beyond the Limits to Growth

Richard Heinberg

In 1972, the now-classic book Limits to Growth explored the consequences for Earth’s ecosystems of exponential growth in population, industrialization, pollution, food production, and resource depletion. That book, which still stands as the best-selling environmental title ever published, reported...

Smart Decline in Post-Carbon Cities

Smart Decline

In 2002, after decades of trying to restart economic development like most other Rust Belt cities, Youngstown made a radical change in approach. The city began devising a transformative plan to encourage some neighborhoods to keep emptying and their...

The Death of Sprawl

The Death of Sprawl

Warren Karlenzig

In April 2009—just when people thought things couldn’t get worse in San Bernardino County, California—bulldozers demolished four perfectly good new houses and a dozen others still under construction in Victorville, 100 miles northeast of downtown Los Angeles. The structures’...

Water: Adapting to a New Normal

Water: Adapting to a New Normal

Sandra Postel

Water, like energy, is essential to virtually every human endeavor. It is needed to grow food and fiber, to make clothes and computers, and, of course, to drink. The growing number of water shortages around the world and the...