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Dear
Bulat,
We’re
starting 2026 with a local focus. Our first
live, online event of the year,
Nourishing
a Bioregional Economy,
happens
in just a couple weeks so we’ve pulled together
a
list articles to
help gather our thoughts for the
conversation.
Here
is a sample from the collection. We’ll be adding
to this list over the coming weeks, so be sure
to check back before the event. And please
let
us know
if we’ve missed something that should be
included. | | |
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Miriam
Landman,
Resilience.org | | |
More
people are starting to see and understand the
tangled ball of troubles and threats that are
being aimed at many of us within the U.S, as
well as many others across the world, and our
shared air, water, lands, ecosystems, and
climate. | | | | | | | | | | | | |
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Nicole
Negowetti,
Resilience.org | | |
How does
change actually happen? This question has
followed me across every chapter of my life,
from political science and philosophy studies,
to graduate work in peacebuilding, into law and
food policy, and now into conversations about
the polycrisis and
metacrisis. | | | | | | | | | | | | |
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The global
economy is broken and brutal. This is clearly
evident in the United States. Unless you are
born into some level of wealth it is extremely
difficult to climb into a higher economic class.
Economic mobility is determined more by a
person’s zip code than merit and hard
work. | | | | | | | | | | | | |
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Zoe
Gilbertson, Liflad
Thoughts | | |
Bioregionalism
is more than a philosophy — it’s a way of life
rooted in place. It asks us to align our
politics, culture, and economy with the natural
boundaries of watersheds, soil and
terrain. | | | | | | | | | | | | |
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From:
Bulat
Yessekin <bulat.y...@gmail.com>Date:
чт, 15 янв. 2026 г. в 06:33 Subject:
Приглашение на семинар по биорегиональной
экономике | |
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