Permaculture grew out of an opposition to industrial farming techniques and preference for traditional (indigenous) land management and spread across the world with 400,000 projects in 120 countries. This paper provides an analysis of the key principles of Permaculture and its affinities with Romantic thought. The author explains the Permaculture movement and its principles followed by an examination of Romanticism from a political and socio-cultural focus. This leads into a discussion of prior links between political ecology and Romantic conservatism. The following sections expand upon Permaculture’s vision of society as expressed by David Holmgren and identify affinities to Romantic thought.
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The Permaculture Research Digest has summaries of newly published permaculture-related research. All items are
hyper-linked to the original publication.
The 'January 2013' archive contains 60 items published in 2012.
Items marked with a # have restricted public access, although abstracts are freely available.
Permaculture Research Digest
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Wednesday 16 December 2015
A call for regeneration (#journal)
Sustainability is not enough: A call for regeneration
We are privileged to be alive at a pivotal moment in human history when all the settled assumptions of the last two centuries are up for renegotiation. New economic, political and social paradigms are evolving right now in response to the converging crises of climate change, energy insecurity and global economic instability. While undoubtedly alarming, the realities of our historic moment also present a window of opportunity. As educators, we can play an important role in preparing our students to play a constructive part in this regenerative project.Can renewables power the world? (journal)
Substitutability of Electricity and Renewable Materials for Fossil Fuels in a Post-Carbon Economy
One way to avoid the risk of energy decline and climate change is to build a 100% renewable global energy mix. However, a globally electrified economy cannot grow above 12 electric terawatts. Can 12 TW of electricity and 1 TW of biomass fuel a future post-carbon economy? The principle economic processes can be replaced with sustainable alternatives based on electricity, charcoal, biogas and hydrogen. Furthermore, those services that cannot be replaced are not crucial. Even so, land transport and aviation are at the limit of what is sustainable, outdoor work should be reorganized, mineral production should be based on recycling, the petrochemical industry should shrink to its 1985 size, and agriculture may require organic farming methods.
One way to avoid the risk of energy decline and climate change is to build a 100% renewable global energy mix. However, a globally electrified economy cannot grow above 12 electric terawatts. Can 12 TW of electricity and 1 TW of biomass fuel a future post-carbon economy? The principle economic processes can be replaced with sustainable alternatives based on electricity, charcoal, biogas and hydrogen. Furthermore, those services that cannot be replaced are not crucial. Even so, land transport and aviation are at the limit of what is sustainable, outdoor work should be reorganized, mineral production should be based on recycling, the petrochemical industry should shrink to its 1985 size, and agriculture may require organic farming methods.
The permaculture city (book)
The Permaculture City: Regenerative Design for Urban, Suburban, and Town Resilience
The Permaculture City provides a new way of thinking about urban living, with practical examples for creating abundant food, energy security, close-knit communities, local and meaningful livelihoods, and sustainable policies in our cities and towns. This important book documents the rise of a new sophistication, depth, and diversity in the approaches and thinking of permaculture designers and practitioners. Understanding nature can do more than improve how we grow, make, or consume things; it can also teach us how to cooperate, make decisions, and arrive at good solutions.
The Permaculture City
Regenerative Design for Urban, Suburban, and Town Resilience
- See more at: http://www.chelseagreen.com/the-permaculture-city#sthash.0KyqCh50.dpufEcological literacy and permaculture (#journal)
Feed Your Mind: Cultivating Ecological Community Literacies with Permaculture
This article proposes permaculture as a way to design first-year composition and community literacy classes. First, the paper connects permaculture with post-humanism to describe ecological community literacies—the type of knowledge that ecological theorists say we need to navigate the end of the anthropocene. Next, it describes assignments that can lead college students to this knowledge, and finally, it describes actual community literacy projects where college students can lead elementary students through assignments to gain this knowledge.
Foraging fruit in cities is healthy (video)
Urban Food Foraging Looks Fruitful
This short podcast from Scientific American shows that fruits growing wild in urban areas are more healthful than store bought fruit and contain lower levels of lead than what's considered safe in drinking water. The scientists involved thus conclude that it’s safe and healthy to eat fruit from most urban trees. Just make sure that peach does not belong to somebody else before you pick it!
Securing soil health (online)
Securing UK Soil Health - briefing for UK MPs
2015 is the United Nations International Year of Soils. Soils underpin
the global food system and regulate water, carbon and nitrogen cycles
but are subject to pressures from population growth and climate change.
In England & Wales, soil degradation costs around £1bn per year.
This POSTnote outlines the evidence for measures that sustain soils and
existing policies affecting soil health.
Transforming our local food system (report)
A key element
in the
transformation
of the food
system is how
we share and
create new
knowledge that
supports this
transition.
This
paper
describes an experience
of
Participative
Action
Research with students
at Cardiff
University as they
establish a
local ‘food
hub’ and engage with a
vegetable box
delivery
scheme. The authors
reflect how this generated
value for
students,
organisations
and the
faculty, and the
challenges we
face;
ultimately
highlighting
how PAR can be
part of
academia’s
commitment to
changing the
food system.