Among the alternatives currently being suggested to economies focused on growth is   a   transition   to localisation;   smaller   local economies,  requiring  less  production  and  consumption. This dissertation focuses on attempts to implement localisation in the small market town of Totnes, in the United Kingdom. This  town  is  the  founding  home of  the  Transition movement,  a  community  activist organisation which promotes economic localisation as one route towards lowering carbon emissions and creating more  resilient,  self-reliant  and  environmentally  sustainable  communities. The localisation  promoted  by  Transition  has  become  a  visible  alternative economic  option  for  the  population in  Totnes,  and the  economic  practices  which  result  are more intentionally, overtly and consciously socially embedded.   
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