Transition Culture

An Evolving Exploration into the Head, Heart and Hands of Energy Descent

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I no longer blog on this site. You can now find me, my general blogs, and the work I am doing researching my forthcoming book on imagination, on my new blog.

Archive for “Localisation” category

Showing results 251 - 255 of 684 for the category: Localisation.


20 Nov 2010

Excellent New Film of the Unleashing of Transition City Lancaster

In April this year I went to Lancaster for the Unleashing of Transition City Lancaster, and a fine event it was too.  Mark Rotherham filmed the event and is editing a film of the event, and has just made this taster available, and rather wonderful it is too… I love his animations of my ‘deep fetid lagoon’ slides….  Thanks Mark.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x5aOXs8GwJc

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16 Nov 2010

The 2010 Transition Town Totnes Winterfest

While I was Tadelakting my bathroom last Saturday, something far more interesting was happening in Totnes town, the annual TTT Winterfest. Sara and Emilio of nu-project were there, and have done this great film of the event, giving a flavour of the different initiatives underway and of what the day was like.

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9 Nov 2010

Can Totnes and District House Itself? The potential of local building materials to build resilience

Here is a section from my recently completed thesis, which is available here, which looks at the potential of local building materials in the relocalisation process.

“The process of building with bales includes the possibility of making a profound change in the fabric of human societies around the world.  In fact this vision is not exclusively a matter of straw bales: the questions we are trying to pose…. are basic: how do we build, and how does that process occur in relation to the community and to the life around us?  Straw bales happen to be the material that has inspired many to look at the process of building in a different light”.  (Steen et al.1994: xvi).

In the same way the local food movement shifts its focus from out-of-season, long supply chain, high embodied energy foods towards more locally sourced, low impact foods rooted in the local region or ‘foodshed’ (Kloppenberg et al. 1996), an emerging branch of architecture and construction examine similar transitions with building materials. 

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9 Nov 2010

Now Available: ‘Localisation and Resilience at the Local Level: The Case of Transition Town Totnes (Devon, UK)’

Three years in the making, I am delighted to announce the completion and availability of my PhD thesis, which offers the most in-depth study yet of the Transition concept in practice.  It can now be ordered here.  Exhaustively referenced and comprehensive in its analysis of the thinking underpinning Transition and of its impacts in practice (running to over 90,000 words), ‘Localisation and Resilience’ is a pivotal addition to the literature on this fast-growing response to peak oil and climate change. It takes as its focus the Devon town of Totnes, the UK’s first Transition initiative, looking in detail, using interviews, oral history, focus groups, surveys, World Cafe and Open Space methods, at the impact Transition Town Totnes has had during its four year existence. It also takes a detailed look at the literature on resilience, and argues that the combination of resilience thinking, localisation and social enterprise offer a powerful tool for the economic revival of communities and for achieving a low carbon economy. If you are interested in resilience, sustainability, Transition, and the future of local economies, this is an essential new publication

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20 Oct 2010

An Interview with Alexis Rowell, author of ‘Communities, Councils and a Low Carbon Future’

To celebrate the launch of Alexis Rowell’s book ‘Communities, Councils and a Low-Carbon Future: what we can do if governments won’t’, I recently interviewed Alexis about the book, and a number of other things besides.  My thanks to Alexis for taking the time to do this….

Many people’s experience of engaging with local Councils is an intensely frustrating one.  Yet in your book you argue that not only should Transitioners engage, but should also put themselves forward for office.  Why?

Yes, it can be endlessly frustrating. I often use the analogy of trying to turn a tanker. Or the Titanic! But a local authority can make a huge difference. When I think how much we managed to change in Camden during 2006-10 and how much good practice I’ve seen at councils around the country and abroad – frankly it’s amazing. So frustrating yes but worth it if you persevere.

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