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Map of the Cascadia Bioregion () Shifting local and regional economies towards increased local production for local consumption will only be achieved in complex multi-stakeholder integration processes with people taking a whole systems design perspective in a collaborative effort to create regional abundance. Such a transition will require skill, persistence and patience, yet it promises diverse and vibrant regional economies, resilient and thriving communities, and the protection and regeneration of regional bio-cultural diversity.
“Oral histories and historical research can offer fascinating insights into how people used to feed, employ and heat themselves. Clearly, not all of it is relevant and collecting reminiscences carries a danger of romanticising the past and devaluing the present, but there is much that can be learned.’”
— Rob HopkinsLearning from traditional knowledge and history can be another useful approach to identifying enterprise ideas and business models that actively contribute to the resilient, low-carbon regional economies (as a basis for global economic resilience) that we are transitioning into. Research into the economic activities that existed in one’s home place and region as recently as 50 years ago can identify bio-cultural opportunities for the elegant blending of traditional knowledge, craft and local-scale production with modern decentralized (additive) manufacturing, peer-to-peer innovation and open-source knowledge sharing.
Framework for Promoting Bioregionalism in Cities () This last half-century has seen a progressive disconnection between the specific resource base of the Earth’s different bioregions and the economic activities carried out there. That is, abundant fossil fuels have allowed corporations to ship raw materials to the other side of the world for processing, simply because labour costs and environmental protection standards were low there. As we move into a low-carbon future, we will have to shift our resource and energy base from fossil fuels and mined minerals to a solar (green) chemistry and bio-resource based material culture. We are transitioning from a fossil-extraction-based degenerative economy to a bio-productive and renewable-energy-based regenerative economy. As the transition progresses, there is likely to be a much stronger relationship between a region’s resource base and its economic activities — a process known as economic relocalisation.
A recent exhibition at San Francisco public library celebrate the history of Planet Drum Foundation who have been promoting bioregional development since the 1970s Combined with the potential added by sharing collaborative access to the best and most appropriate modern technology and knowledge, the low-energy world our grandparents inhabited may provide a rich seam of ideas on enterprise activities that are likely to become progressively more profitable as the cost of carbon rises. But more than only generating financial profits, such enterprises can regenerate multi-capital abundance (see ‘’). Not all local and traditional knowledge and skills are lost. In many places this bio-cultural uniqueness of place has been preserved to a greater or lesser extent. Our elders are walking encyclopaedias that we would do well to explore in depth and with respect while they are still with us. The movement has made research into local and regional economic history and the harvesting and exchanging of historic local knowledge and skills part of its transition methodology. It is aptly called ‘’. Here, recording oral histories is seen as being a vital tool for harvesting the wisdom of our elders about life in a locally and regionally centred low-carbon economy. There are regional and cultural differences between and within the Global North and the Global South with regard to how long industrialization and globalization has had time to erode local and traditional knowledge.
CRecording Local Knowledge ( Transition Town) is on the one hand elegantly adapted to the bio-cultural conditions of a particular locality and on the other hand in constant collaborative exchange at the national and global scales. pays attention to the context of the different scales of design and the need for scale-linking design for whole-systems health. The approach and transition to regionally focussed bio-economies also requires this kind of cosmopolitan bioregionalism based on global-local collaboration. All of these aspects of bioregional development build on multi-layer mapping to create a whole systems understanding of the region that can inform the dialogue, knowledge exchange and collaboration required for wise regional decision making. Here are four inspiring examples of locally and regionally focussed economic development and revitalisation:
The Ten Principles of One Planet Living by the BioRegional Development Group ()
Over the last decade, building on a string of successful projects, the work of the Bioregional Development Group has spread with project on various continents aiming to create conditions for . Here is a (2:47mins) on Will One Planet Living Work for You? The Bioregional Development Group was also a partner in the development of the Beddington Zero Emissions Ecovillage (BedZED) with the architect Bill Dunster.
BedZED Ecovillage (London) —
In 2011, members of the Totnes Transition Town initiative and people at Schumacher College, got together with local authority representatives and other stakeholders to initiate a local/regionally focussed economic re-development project called the . A working group started to map the potential for the local economy and after a year published the Totens & District Local Economic Blueprint (). This plan identifies a number of risks and opportunities for local economic development.
The REconomy Centre Totnes Since then the has been set up as a local focal point and logistic home for the REconomy which offers regional entrepreneurs a peer-support network and facilitates regional collaboration.
Here is a short video (13mins) by Fiona Ward introducing the REconomy project. For a more in depth presentation on the different successes of the REconomy project, here is a longer (40mins).
In 2015 the REconomy project launched a series of very practical and informative how-to-guides on the following subjects:
And now there is also REconomy practitioners, local to global virtual community of practice with worldwide ambitions that emerged from REconomy Project — see on our landing page.]
BALLE was started in 2001 by Judy Wicks and a group of entrepreneur business owners who wanted to make a difference in their communities and local economy (). Originally focused on the North-East of the USA and in particular Philadelphia, the network now supports localist initiatives around the country. BALLE asks the question What is Real Prosperity?
“Localism is about building communities that are more healthy and sustainable — backed by local economies that are stronger and more resilient. It means we use regional resources to meet our needs — reconnecting eaters with farmers, investors with entrepreneurs, and business owners with the communities and natural places on which they depend. It recognizes that not one of us can do it alone and that we’re all better off, when we’re all better off.”
— Business Alliance for Local Living Economies
Here is a longer (30mins) of Judy Wicks speaking about Local Living Economies at the Bioneers by the Bay conference in 2012.
You can download a copy of BALLE’s 2015 Impact Report .
BALLE’s Theory of Change ()
Here is a short (7mins) of Helena Norberg-Hodge, an alternative Nobel Prize (Right Livelihood Award) recipient, and other members of the alliance explaining the urgent need for localization in a globalized world. … [another example that is not mentioned in this 2015 curriculum excerpt, as it is of more recent origin, would be the connecting bioregional regenerative development projects around the world. Gaia Education has been a partner in the launch of one of those in collaboration with who are offering this online course in Spanish.] [This is an (edited) excerpt from the ‘’ of ’s online course in ‘’. The next installment of the ‘Ecological Dimension’ will start in mid January 2019. The material in this dimension was co-authored by Lisa Shaw, Michael Shaw, Ezio Gorio, and Daniel Christian Wahl, author of ‘’ and Head of Innovation and Design at Gaia Education.]