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social-ecology.org | ||
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jfsdigital.org
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| | | | | Reminiscing to the early days of my intrigue with the future, Limits to Growth (1973) was the first piece of foresight literature that truly resonated with me. The books long-term forecast models projected a dozen scenarios that were generally quite negative. And they were severely criticized for being doom-and-gloom. The authors updated the model and the work at 20- and 30-years later (Meadows et al., 1993, 2004) and stuck to their conclusions. And here we are today at the 50-year anniversary and witnes... | |
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entitleblogdotorg3.wordpress.com
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| | | | | By Aaron Vansintjan* Proponents of degrowth and accelerationism will likely be found in the same room for decades to come. Despite their opposite 'branding', they should probably talk; they have a lot to learn from each other. For the past little while I've been involved with a group in Barcelona, which studies and advocates 'degrowth':... | |
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unevenearth.org
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| | | | | by Aaron Vansintjan For the past little while I've been involved with a group in Barcelona, which studies and advocates 'degrowth': the idea that we must downscale production and consumption to have a more equitable society, and that we therefore must dismantle the ideology of 'economic growth at all costs'. As you can imagine, they | |
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wattsupwiththat.com
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| | | From the Fabius Maximus Website Larry Kummer, Editor 9 May 2019 Summary: The propaganda barrage for the Green New Deal is accelerating. Science plays a small role in them. Every day brings a new crop of articles like this one. Let's look under its hood and see what we find. "Where our New World Begins:Power,... | ||