Reviving Tradition for Future Abundance [New REDWeb article]

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Pooja Kishinani

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Jan 5, 2026, 12:40:16 AMJan 5
to RED listserve, Vikalp Sangam elist, Global Tapestry of Alternatives, PeDAGoG: Post-Development Academic-Activist Global Group, Discussion list about emerging world social movement
Dear All, 

Our latest article on REDWeb may offer a spark of hope-  

Reviving Tradition for Future Abundance by Simon Mitambo and Rory Sheldon

By revitalising traditional knowledge across agriculture, crafts, weather forecasting, and governance, the Tharaka community of Mount Kenya are safeguarding the richness and resilience of their culture, spirituality, and ecology, and nurturing a bioculturally abundant future in a rapidly changing world


This article was was originally published by Terra Lingua

May 2026 be filled with more stories of resistance, solidarity, and radical possibility.

warmly, 
pooja

Anderson, Greg

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Jan 13, 2026, 10:53:44 PMJan 13
to RED listserve, Vikalp Sangam elist, Global Tapestry of Alternatives, PeDAGoG: Post-Development Academic-Activist Global Group, Discussion list about emerging world social movement
Dear All:
I hope it is okay to post this here—my apologies if not! In case anyone is interested, the essay outlines an alternative pluriversal vision of history, one that is very much aligned with perspectives shared by members of this group.
 
All best,
Greg

Greg Anderson (he/him/his)

Professor of History, Courtesy Professor of Comparative Studies

Department of History

Ohio State University

230 Annie and John Glenn Ave

Columbus, Ohio 43210, USA

 

Recent book: The Realness of Things Past

TED Talk on the Pluriverse

        

I acknowledge that The Ohio State University occupies the ancestral and contemporary lands of the Shawnee, Potawatomi, Delaware, Miami, Peoria, Seneca, Wyandotte, Ojibwe, and Cherokee peoples. The university resides on land ceded in the 1795 Treaty of Greenville and the forced removal of tribal nations through the Indian Removal Act of 1830.


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