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 “Transition Network” category

Showing results 101 - 105 of 132 for the category: Transition Network.


15 Dec 2009

Transition Town Kinsale wins the 2009 FEASTA Award

kinsaleprizeThe Anne Behan Community Sustainability Award for Transition Initiatives on the island of Ireland

This award presented by Feasta, the Foundation for the Economics of Sustainability celebrates communities and groups who are using the Transition Process to meet local cultural, social, and economic needs in ways which strengthen the bonds of the community, build its resilience, economic self-reliance and protect and enhance its natural environment.

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11 Dec 2009

Transition Network Seeks a Diversity Project Coordinator

diversityA new post has opened up with the Transition Network. The role of the Diversity Project Coordinator will be to ‘develop models and practices to enable the transition movement to successfully engage across culture, race, faith and income groups.’  The recent research by Gill Seyfang, A Fine City in Transition gives a good picture of how Transition is reaching many people that environmental campaigns haven’t attracted (for example, 30% of people in Transition Norwich have never previously been involved in environmental groups).

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Discussion: 3 Comments

Categories: General, Transition Network


7 Dec 2009

To Fly or Not to Fly? Transition Network debates…. what do you think?

planeRegular readers will know that I don’t fly, and that if I can’t get somewhere by train, we use other means of communicating.  But should the same apply to everyone who works for Transition Network?  Should the organisation make a commitment that anyone who represents it similarly seeks alternative ways to get around?  This is a very live discussion within the organisation.  In order to move it forward, Naresh Giangrande and myself had an email exchange on the subject (see below), and now we’d love to hear your thoughts.  Should an organisation committed to modelling Transition also exemplify sustainable transport?  As the Copenhagen talks kick off, with many thousands of climate activists flying there, this is a very pertinent question.  Have a read of the debate so far, and then have your say too….

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2 Dec 2009

Six Things We Know For Sure in the Wake of ‘Climate Gate’

hoaxA few people have been in touch to ask whether, in the light of the recent illegal hacking into UEA’s emails, and the proposition by climate deniers that some of the emails that have emerged prove climate change is a scam, Transition Network now intends to renounce the absurd notion of human-induced climate change.  Of course not.  It has been a fascinating few days though, and we are probably the last people to actually post any thoughts on it, but on reflection my sense is that there are perhaps 6 things we can say that we know for sure (or, as climate scientists would say, with a very high degree of probability) .

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19 Nov 2009

‘Transition Norwich: a Fine City in Transition’ – 2009 Survey Findings

norwichHot on the heels of her excellent 2009 Transition Network survey, Gill Seyfang of UEA is back, this time with a similarly excellent and comprehensive survey of Transition Norwich.  You can download the pdf. of her survey here.  The findings Gill notes are very interesting, such as how a third of the members have not previously been engaged in local environmental groups, and a further sixth have been motivated to return to local activism by the Transition movement. The survey finds that members are attracted by the positive, hopeful message of Transition, emphasising grassroots empowerment, local solutions and constructive action rather than protesting or campaigning. Like yesterday’s report from Transition East, the section on troubleshooting is fascinating.  The most alarming part of the survey was to hear that only 17% of people involved with Transition Norwich have ever read Transition Culture.  Dear oh dear, what’s a man to do….

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