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Ecovillage

An ecovillage is a traditional or intentional community with the goal of becoming more socially, culturally, economically, and/or ecologically sustainable. An ecovillage strives to produce the least possible negative impact on the natural environment through intentional physical design and resident behavior choices.[1][2][3][4][5][6] It is consciously designed through locally owned, participatory processes to regenerate and restore its social and natural environments. Most range from a population of 50 to 250 individuals, although some are smaller, and traditional ecovillages are often much larger. Larger ecovillages often exist as networks of smaller sub-communities. Some ecovillages have grown through like-minded individuals, families, or other small groups—who are not members, at least at the outset—settling on the ecovillage's periphery and participating de facto in the community. There are currently more than 10,000 ecovillages around the world.[7]

Sieben Linden Ecovillage
An eco-house at Findhorn Ecovillage with a turf roof and solar panels
Tallebudgera Mountain and a vegetable garden at the Currumbin Ecovillage in Queensland, 2015

Ecovillagers are united by shared ecological, social-economic and cultural-spiritual values.[8] Concretely, ecovillagers seek alternatives to ecologically destructive electrical, water, transportation, and waste-treatment systems, as well as the larger social systems that mirror and support them. Many see the breakdown of traditional forms of community, wasteful consumerist lifestyles, the destruction of natural habitat, urban sprawl, factory farming, and over-reliance on fossil fuels as trends that must be changed to avert ecological disaster and create richer and more fulfilling ways of life.

Ecovillages offer small-scale communities with minimal ecological impact or regenerative impacts as an alternative. However, such communities often cooperate with peer villages in networks of their own (see Global Ecovillage Network (GEN) for an example). This model of collective action is similar to that of Ten Thousand Villages, which supports the fair trade of goods worldwide.

Definition edit

Multiple sources define ecovillages as a subtype of intentional communities focussing on sustainability.[9][10][11] More pronounced definitions are listed here:

Source Year Definition
Robert Gilman 1991 "human-scale full-featured settlement in which human activities are harmlessly integrated into the natural world in a way that is supportive of healthy human development, and can be successfully continued into the indefinite future."[12]
Diana Michelle Fischetti 2008 "intentional community whose members strive to live in a socially and environmentally sustainable manner, to practice voluntary simplicity, and to cultivate meaning, life satisfaction, and fulfillment."[13]
Kosha Anja Joubert, Executive Director of the GEN 2016 "intentional or traditional communities, consciously designed through participatory process to regenerate their social and natural environments. The social, ecological, economic, and cultural aspects are integrated into a holistic sustainable development model that is adapted to local contexts. Ecovillages are rural or urban settlements with vibrant social structures, vastly diverse, yet united in their actions towards low impact, high quality lifestyles."[14]
GEN 2018 "intentional, traditional or urban community that is consciously designed through locally owned, participatory processes in all 5 dimensions of sustainability (social, culture, ecology, economy and whole systems design) to regenerate their social and natural environments"[15][16]

In Joubert's view, ecovillages are seen as an ongoing process, rather than a particular outcome. They often start off with a focus on one of the four dimensions of sustainability, e.g. ecology, but evolve into holistic models for restoration. In this view, aiming for sustainability is not enough; it is vital to restore and regenerate the fabric of life and across all four dimensions of sustainability: social, environmental, economic and cultural.

Ecovillages have developed in recent years as technology has improved, so they have more sophisticated structures as noted by Baydoun, M. 2013.

Generally, the ecovillage concept is not tied to specific sectarian (religious, political, corporate) organizations or belief systems not directly related to environmentalism, such as monasteries, cults, or communes.

History edit

The modern-day desire for community was notably characterized by the communal "back to the land" movement of the 1960s and 1970s through communities such as the earliest example that still survives, the Miccosukee Land Co-op co-founded in May 1973 by James Clement van Pelt in Tallahassee, Florida. In the same decades, the imperative for alternatives to radically inefficient energy-use patterns, in particular automobile-enabled suburban sprawl, was brought into focus by recurrent energy crises. The term "eco-village" was introduced by Georgia Tech Professor George Ramsey in a 1978 address, "Passive Energy Applications for the Built Environment", to the First World Energy Conference of the Association of Energy Engineers,[17] to describe small-scale, car-free, close-in developments, including suburban infill, arguing that "the great energy waste in the United States is not in its technology; it is in its lifestyle and concept of living."[18] Ramsey's article includes a sketch for a "self-sufficient pedestrian solar village" by one of his students that looks very similar to eco-villages today.

The movement became more focused and organized in the cohousing and related alternative-community movements of the mid-1980s. Then, in 1991, Robert Gilman and Diane Gilman co-authored a germinal study called "Ecovillages and Sustainable Communities" for Gaia Trust, in which the ecological and communitarian themes were brought together.

The first Eco-Village in North America began its first stages in 1990. Earthaven Eco-Village in Black Mountain, NC was the first community called an Eco-Village and was designed using permaculture (holistic) principles. The first residents moved onto the vacant land in 1993. As of 2019 Earthaven Eco-Village has over 70 families living off the grid on 368 acres of land.

The ecovillage movement began to coalesce at the annual autumn conference of Findhorn, in Scotland, in 1995. The conference was called: "Ecovillages and Sustainable Communities", and conference organizers turned away hundreds of applicants. According to Ross Jackson, "somehow they had struck a chord that resonated far and wide. The word 'ecovillage'... thus became part of the language of the Cultural Creatives."[19] After that conference, many intentional communities, including Findhorn, began calling themselves "ecovillages", giving birth to a new movement. The Global Ecovillage Network, formed by a group of about 25 people from various countries who had attended the Findhorn conference, crystallized the event by linking hundreds of small projects from around the world, that had similar goals but had formerly operated without knowledge of each other. Gaia Trust of Denmark agreed to fund the network for its first five years.[19] Today, there are self-identified ecovillages in over 70 countries on six continents.[20]

Since the 1995 conference, a number of the early members of the Global Ecovillage Network have tried other approaches to ecovillage building in an attempt to build settlements that would be attractive to mainstream culture in order to make sustainable development more generally accepted. One of these with some degree of success is Living Villages and The Wintles where eco-houses are arranged so that social connectivity is maximised and residents have shared food growing areas, woodlands, and animal husbandry for greater sustainability.

Ecovillage Principles edit

The principles on which ecovillages rely can be applied to urban and rural settings, as well as to developing and developed countries. Advocates seek a sustainable lifestyle (for example, of voluntary simplicity) for inhabitants with a minimum of trade outside the local area, or ecoregion. Many advocates also seek independence from existing infrastructures, although others, particularly in more urban settings, pursue more integration with existing infrastructure. Rural ecovillages are usually based on organic farming, permaculture and other approaches which promote ecosystem function and biodiversity.[21] Ecovillages, whether urban or rural, tend to integrate community and ecological values within a principle-based approach to sustainability, such as permaculture design.[22]

Johnathan Dawson, former president of the Global Ecovillage Network, describes five ecovillage principles in his 2006 book Ecovillages: New Frontiers for Sustainability:

  1. They are not government-sponsored projects, but grassroots initiatives.
  2. Their residents value and practice community living.
  3. Their residents are not overly dependent on government, corporate, or other centralized sources for water, food, shelter, power, and other basic necessities. Rather, they attempt to provide these resources themselves.
  4. Their residents have a strong sense of shared values, often characterized in spiritual terms.
  5. They often serve as research and demonstration sites, offering educational experiences for others.[20]

Environmental impact edit

Ecovillages often form out of care for the environment and an effort to be more sustainable. Ecovillages often use reusable power sources, such as solar and wind power, and use natural materials like mud, wood, and straw to build with. Regenerative technologies such as bioclimatic agriculture are used.[7]

A study on an ecovillage in Ithaca, New York found that the average ecological footprint of a resident in the ecovillage was 70% less than the ecological footprint of most Americans.[23]

Governance edit

Effective governance is important within ecovillages. It provides a model to implement and promote sustainable lifestyles (Cunningham and Wearing, 2013). While the first generation of ecovillagers tended to adopt consensus decision-making as a governance method, some difficulties with consensus as an everyday decision-making method emerged: it can be extremely time-intensive, and decisions too often could be blocked by a few intransigent members.[24] More recently many ecovillages have moved toward sociocracy and related alternative decision-making methods.[25]

In addition, ecovillages look for alternative forms of government, with an emphasis on deeper connections with ecology rather than economics.[7]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Ulug, Ciska; Horlings, Lummina; Trell, Elen-Maarja (2021). "Collective Identity Supporting Sustainability Transformations in Ecovillage Communities". Sustainability. 13 (15): 8148. doi:10.3390/su13158148.
  2. ^ Casey, Katherine; Lichrou, Maria; O’Malley, Lisa (2020). "Prefiguring sustainable living: an ecovillage story". Journal of Marketing Management. 36 (17–18): 1658–1679. doi:10.1080/0267257X.2020.1801800.
  3. ^ Caves, R. W. (2004). Encyclopedia of the City. Routledge. p. 209.
  4. ^ Xue, Jin (2014). "Is eco-village/urban village the future of a degrowth society? An urban planner's perspective". Ecological Economics. 105: 130–138. doi:10.1016/j.ecolecon.2014.06.003.
  5. ^ Schwab, Anne-Kathrin; Roysen, Rebeca (2022). "Ecovillages and other community-led initiatives as experiences of climate action". Climate Action. 1 (1): 1–4. doi:10.1007/s44168-022-00012-7.
  6. ^ Fonseca, Renata Amorim Almeida; Irving, Marta de Azevedo; Nasri, Yasmin Xavier Guimarães; Ferreira, Graciella Faico (2022). "Sustainability and social transformation: the role of ecovillages in confluence with the pluriverse of community-led alternatives". Climate Action. 1 (1): 1–10. doi:10.1007/s44168-022-00022-5.
  7. ^ a b c "Ecovillages as an ecological alternative". Iberdrola. Retrieved 2020-08-21.
  8. ^ Van Schyndel Kasper, D. (2008). "Redefining Community in the Ecovillage." Human Ecology Review 15:12–24. Retrieved on July 28, 2018.
  9. ^ Ergas, Christina (1 March 2010). "A Model of Sustainable Living: Collective Identity in an Urban Ecovillage". Organization & Environment. 23 (1): 32–54. doi:10.1177/1086026609360324. ISSN 1086-0266. S2CID 144630214. Retrieved 10 November 2021.
  10. ^ Kirby, Andy (1 September 2003). "Redefining social and environmental relations at the ecovillage at Ithaca: A case study". Journal of Environmental Psychology. 23 (3): 323–332. doi:10.1016/S0272-4944(03)00025-2. ISSN 0272-4944. Retrieved 10 November 2021.
  11. ^ Beck, Rachel; Ormsby, Alison (2016). "A Case Study Analysis of Dancing Rabbit Ecovillage, Missouri - ProQuest". ProQuest. Retrieved 10 November 2021.
  12. ^ Gilman, Robert (Summer, 1991). "The Eco-village Challenge" 2004-12-13 at the Wayback Machine. In Context. Retrieved on: 2008-04-09.
  13. ^ Fischetti, Diana Michelle (September 2008). Building Resistance from Home: EcoVillage at Ithaca as a Model of Sustainable Living (Thesis). University of Oregon. Retrieved 10 November 2021.
  14. ^ Joubert, Kosha Anja (2016). "OVERCOMING APARTHEID-the Global Ecovillage Network - ProQuest". ProQuest: 10–12. Retrieved 10 November 2021.
  15. ^ "About GEN - The Global Ecovillage Network (GEN) bridges countries, cultures, and communities!". Global Ecovillage Network. 13 April 2015. Retrieved 10 November 2021.
  16. ^ Singh, Bijay; Keitsch, Martina M.; Shrestha, Mahesh (2019). "Scaling up sustainability: Concepts and practices of the ecovillage approach". Sustainable Development. 27 (2): 237–244. doi:10.1002/sd.1882. hdl:11250/2626781. ISSN 1099-1719. S2CID 159366736. Retrieved 10 November 2021.
  17. ^ George Ramsey, "Passive Energy Applications for the Built Environment", First World Energy Conference, Association of Energy Engineers, published in Energy Engineering Technology: Proceedings of the First World Energy Engineering Congress, October 31-November 2, 1978 in Atlanta, Ga. (Fairmont Press, 1979), pp. 220–242. For the term "eco-village" itself, see pp. 229 and 239. http://www.villagehabitat.com/resources/papers/passive_energy.pdf 2013-12-19 at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ "Passive Energy Applications for the Built Environment", p. 230
  19. ^ a b Jackson, Ross (Summer, 2004). Permaculture Magazine 40. Retrieved on: 2011-08-11.
  20. ^ a b Taggart, Jonathan (Nov-Dec, 2009). Inside an ecovillage. bNet - CBS Interactive Business Network. Retrieved on: 2011-08-11.
  21. ^ . Archived from the original on 2013-05-12. Retrieved 2014-01-23. Ted Trainer on ecovillages.
  22. ^ Holmgren, David. "The Essence of Permaculture." Retrieved on: 2013-07-31
  23. ^ "Living Greener – Ecovillage at Ithaca". Retrieved 2023-03-26.
  24. ^ Diana Leafe Christian, "Busting-the-myth-that-consensus-with-unanimity-is-good-for-communities", http://www.resilience.org/stories/2013-03-20/busting-the-myth-that-consensus-with-unanimity-is-good-for-communities-part-ii
  25. ^ Buck, John; Villines, Sharon (2007). We the People: Consenting to a Deeper Democracy (First edition, second printing with corrections ed.). Washington DC: Sociocracy.info Press. pp. 31, 39. ISBN 978-0-9792827-0-6(pbk)

Kellogg, W. Keating, W. (2011), "Cleveland's Ecovillage: green and affordable housing through a network alliance", Housing Policy Debate, 21 (1), pp. 69–91

Cunningham, Paul A. and Wearing, Stephen L.(2013).The Politics of Consensus: An Exploration of the Cloughjordan Ecovillage, Ireland.[electronic version]. Cosmopolitan Civil Societies. 5(2) pp. 1–28

Further reading edit

Books
  • Christian, D. 2003. Creating a Life Together: Practical Tools to Grow Ecovillages and Intentional Communities New Society Publishers. ISBN 0-86571-471-1
  • Dawson, Jonathan (2006) Ecovillages: Angelica Buenaventura for Sustainability. Green Books. ISBN 1-903998-77-8
  • Hill, R. and Dunbar, R. 2002. Human Nature, Vol. 14, No. 1, pp. 53–72.
  • Jackson, H. and Svensson, K. 2002. Ecovillage Living: Restoring the Earth and Her People. Green Books. ISBN 1-903998-16-6
  • Walker, Liz. 2005 EcoVillage at Ithaca: Pioneering a Sustainable Culture. New Society Publishers ISBN 0-86571-524-6
  • 2009. Model of Ecovillage Development: Development of Rural Areas in Order To Improve Quality of Life for Rural Residents, Indonesia. ISBN 978-979-19278-5-7
  • Joubert, Kosha and Dregger, Leila 2015. Ecovillage: 1001 ways to heal the planet .[dead link] Triarchy Press. ISBN 978-1-90947-075-0
  • Christian, Diana L. (ed.) . Ecovillage Newsletter.
  • Gilman, Robert (ed.) . In Context.
  • Genovese, Paolo Vincenzo (2019), Being Light on the Earth. Eco-Village Policy and Practice for a Sustainable World, Libria, Melfi, Vol. I., ISDN 978-88-6764-187-1. Also in eBook.
  • Frederica Miller, Ed. (2018) Ecovillages Around the World: 20 Regenerative Designs for Sustainable Communities 2019-03-28 at the Wayback Machine - Rochester, Vermont, Findhorn Press,
  • Litfin, Karen T. (2013) Ecovillages: Lessons for Sustainable Community. Polity. ISBN 9780745679501

External links edit

  • Global Ecovillage Network [1]
  • eurotopia - Living in Community: European Directory of Communities and Ecovillages
  • Fellowship for Intentional Community: Ecovillage Directory 2014-02-22 at the Wayback Machine
  • Vietnamese Eco Village in Saigon

ecovillage, ecovillage, traditional, intentional, community, with, goal, becoming, more, socially, culturally, economically, ecologically, sustainable, ecovillage, strives, produce, least, possible, negative, impact, natural, environment, through, intentional,. An ecovillage is a traditional or intentional community with the goal of becoming more socially culturally economically and or ecologically sustainable An ecovillage strives to produce the least possible negative impact on the natural environment through intentional physical design and resident behavior choices 1 2 3 4 5 6 It is consciously designed through locally owned participatory processes to regenerate and restore its social and natural environments Most range from a population of 50 to 250 individuals although some are smaller and traditional ecovillages are often much larger Larger ecovillages often exist as networks of smaller sub communities Some ecovillages have grown through like minded individuals families or other small groups who are not members at least at the outset settling on the ecovillage s periphery and participating de facto in the community There are currently more than 10 000 ecovillages around the world 7 Sieben Linden EcovillageAn eco house at Findhorn Ecovillage with a turf roof and solar panelsTallebudgera Mountain and a vegetable garden at the Currumbin Ecovillage in Queensland 2015Ecovillagers are united by shared ecological social economic and cultural spiritual values 8 Concretely ecovillagers seek alternatives to ecologically destructive electrical water transportation and waste treatment systems as well as the larger social systems that mirror and support them Many see the breakdown of traditional forms of community wasteful consumerist lifestyles the destruction of natural habitat urban sprawl factory farming and over reliance on fossil fuels as trends that must be changed to avert ecological disaster and create richer and more fulfilling ways of life Ecovillages offer small scale communities with minimal ecological impact or regenerative impacts as an alternative However such communities often cooperate with peer villages in networks of their own see Global Ecovillage Network GEN for an example This model of collective action is similar to that of Ten Thousand Villages which supports the fair trade of goods worldwide Contents 1 Definition 2 History 3 Ecovillage Principles 4 Environmental impact 5 Governance 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksDefinition editMultiple sources define ecovillages as a subtype of intentional communities focussing on sustainability 9 10 11 More pronounced definitions are listed here Source Year DefinitionRobert Gilman 1991 human scale full featured settlement in which human activities are harmlessly integrated into the natural world in a way that is supportive of healthy human development and can be successfully continued into the indefinite future 12 Diana Michelle Fischetti 2008 intentional community whose members strive to live in a socially and environmentally sustainable manner to practice voluntary simplicity and to cultivate meaning life satisfaction and fulfillment 13 Kosha Anja Joubert Executive Director of the GEN 2016 intentional or traditional communities consciously designed through participatory process to regenerate their social and natural environments The social ecological economic and cultural aspects are integrated into a holistic sustainable development model that is adapted to local contexts Ecovillages are rural or urban settlements with vibrant social structures vastly diverse yet united in their actions towards low impact high quality lifestyles 14 GEN 2018 intentional traditional or urban community that is consciously designed through locally owned participatory processes in all 5 dimensions of sustainability social culture ecology economy and whole systems design to regenerate their social and natural environments 15 16 In Joubert s view ecovillages are seen as an ongoing process rather than a particular outcome They often start off with a focus on one of the four dimensions of sustainability e g ecology but evolve into holistic models for restoration In this view aiming for sustainability is not enough it is vital to restore and regenerate the fabric of life and across all four dimensions of sustainability social environmental economic and cultural Ecovillages have developed in recent years as technology has improved so they have more sophisticated structures as noted by Baydoun M 2013 Generally the ecovillage concept is not tied to specific sectarian religious political corporate organizations or belief systems not directly related to environmentalism such as monasteries cults or communes History editThe modern day desire for community was notably characterized by the communal back to the land movement of the 1960s and 1970s through communities such as the earliest example that still survives the Miccosukee Land Co op co founded in May 1973 by James Clement van Pelt in Tallahassee Florida In the same decades the imperative for alternatives to radically inefficient energy use patterns in particular automobile enabled suburban sprawl was brought into focus by recurrent energy crises The term eco village was introduced by Georgia Tech Professor George Ramsey in a 1978 address Passive Energy Applications for the Built Environment to the First World Energy Conference of the Association of Energy Engineers 17 to describe small scale car free close in developments including suburban infill arguing that the great energy waste in the United States is not in its technology it is in its lifestyle and concept of living 18 Ramsey s article includes a sketch for a self sufficient pedestrian solar village by one of his students that looks very similar to eco villages today The movement became more focused and organized in the cohousing and related alternative community movements of the mid 1980s Then in 1991 Robert Gilman and Diane Gilman co authored a germinal study called Ecovillages and Sustainable Communities for Gaia Trust in which the ecological and communitarian themes were brought together The first Eco Village in North America began its first stages in 1990 Earthaven Eco Village in Black Mountain NC was the first community called an Eco Village and was designed using permaculture holistic principles The first residents moved onto the vacant land in 1993 As of 2019 Earthaven Eco Village has over 70 families living off the grid on 368 acres of land The ecovillage movement began to coalesce at the annual autumn conference of Findhorn in Scotland in 1995 The conference was called Ecovillages and Sustainable Communities and conference organizers turned away hundreds of applicants According to Ross Jackson somehow they had struck a chord that resonated far and wide The word ecovillage thus became part of the language of the Cultural Creatives 19 After that conference many intentional communities including Findhorn began calling themselves ecovillages giving birth to a new movement The Global Ecovillage Network formed by a group of about 25 people from various countries who had attended the Findhorn conference crystallized the event by linking hundreds of small projects from around the world that had similar goals but had formerly operated without knowledge of each other Gaia Trust of Denmark agreed to fund the network for its first five years 19 Today there are self identified ecovillages in over 70 countries on six continents 20 Since the 1995 conference a number of the early members of the Global Ecovillage Network have tried other approaches to ecovillage building in an attempt to build settlements that would be attractive to mainstream culture in order to make sustainable development more generally accepted One of these with some degree of success is Living Villages and The Wintles where eco houses are arranged so that social connectivity is maximised and residents have shared food growing areas woodlands and animal husbandry for greater sustainability Ecovillage Principles editThe principles on which ecovillages rely can be applied to urban and rural settings as well as to developing and developed countries Advocates seek a sustainable lifestyle for example of voluntary simplicity for inhabitants with a minimum of trade outside the local area or ecoregion Many advocates also seek independence from existing infrastructures although others particularly in more urban settings pursue more integration with existing infrastructure Rural ecovillages are usually based on organic farming permaculture and other approaches which promote ecosystem function and biodiversity 21 Ecovillages whether urban or rural tend to integrate community and ecological values within a principle based approach to sustainability such as permaculture design 22 Johnathan Dawson former president of the Global Ecovillage Network describes five ecovillage principles in his 2006 book Ecovillages New Frontiers for Sustainability They are not government sponsored projects but grassroots initiatives Their residents value and practice community living Their residents are not overly dependent on government corporate or other centralized sources for water food shelter power and other basic necessities Rather they attempt to provide these resources themselves Their residents have a strong sense of shared values often characterized in spiritual terms They often serve as research and demonstration sites offering educational experiences for others 20 Environmental impact editEcovillages often form out of care for the environment and an effort to be more sustainable Ecovillages often use reusable power sources such as solar and wind power and use natural materials like mud wood and straw to build with Regenerative technologies such as bioclimatic agriculture are used 7 A study on an ecovillage in Ithaca New York found that the average ecological footprint of a resident in the ecovillage was 70 less than the ecological footprint of most Americans 23 Governance editEffective governance is important within ecovillages It provides a model to implement and promote sustainable lifestyles Cunningham and Wearing 2013 While the first generation of ecovillagers tended to adopt consensus decision making as a governance method some difficulties with consensus as an everyday decision making method emerged it can be extremely time intensive and decisions too often could be blocked by a few intransigent members 24 More recently many ecovillages have moved toward sociocracy and related alternative decision making methods 25 In addition ecovillages look for alternative forms of government with an emphasis on deeper connections with ecology rather than economics 7 See also editBioenergy village Bioneers Cohousing Communities Directory Deep ecology Den Selvforsynende Landsby Diggers and Dreamers Eco cities Eco municipalities Ecodistrict Eco communalism Eco feminism Eco tourism Garden city movement Green cities Green development Intentional community Leopold Kohr Low energy house Principles of Intelligent Urbanism Retreat survivalism Sustainable habitat Sustainable living Urban vitalityReferences edit Ulug Ciska Horlings Lummina Trell Elen Maarja 2021 Collective Identity Supporting Sustainability Transformations in Ecovillage Communities Sustainability 13 15 8148 doi 10 3390 su13158148 Casey Katherine Lichrou Maria O Malley Lisa 2020 Prefiguring sustainable living an ecovillage story Journal of Marketing Management 36 17 18 1658 1679 doi 10 1080 0267257X 2020 1801800 Caves R W 2004 Encyclopedia of the City Routledge p 209 Xue Jin 2014 Is eco village urban village the future of a degrowth society An urban planner s perspective Ecological Economics 105 130 138 doi 10 1016 j ecolecon 2014 06 003 Schwab Anne Kathrin Roysen Rebeca 2022 Ecovillages and other community led initiatives as experiences of climate action Climate Action 1 1 1 4 doi 10 1007 s44168 022 00012 7 Fonseca Renata Amorim Almeida Irving Marta de Azevedo Nasri Yasmin Xavier Guimaraes Ferreira Graciella Faico 2022 Sustainability and social transformation the role of ecovillages in confluence with the pluriverse of community led alternatives Climate Action 1 1 1 10 doi 10 1007 s44168 022 00022 5 a b c Ecovillages as an ecological alternative Iberdrola Retrieved 2020 08 21 Van Schyndel Kasper D 2008 Redefining Community in the Ecovillage Human Ecology Review 15 12 24 Retrieved on July 28 2018 Ergas Christina 1 March 2010 A Model of Sustainable Living Collective Identity in an Urban Ecovillage Organization amp Environment 23 1 32 54 doi 10 1177 1086026609360324 ISSN 1086 0266 S2CID 144630214 Retrieved 10 November 2021 Kirby Andy 1 September 2003 Redefining social and environmental relations at the ecovillage at Ithaca A case study Journal of Environmental Psychology 23 3 323 332 doi 10 1016 S0272 4944 03 00025 2 ISSN 0272 4944 Retrieved 10 November 2021 Beck Rachel Ormsby Alison 2016 A Case Study Analysis of Dancing Rabbit Ecovillage Missouri ProQuest ProQuest Retrieved 10 November 2021 Gilman Robert Summer 1991 The Eco village Challenge Archived 2004 12 13 at the Wayback Machine In Context Retrieved on 2008 04 09 Fischetti Diana Michelle September 2008 Building Resistance from Home EcoVillage at Ithaca as a Model of Sustainable Living Thesis University of Oregon Retrieved 10 November 2021 Joubert Kosha Anja 2016 OVERCOMING APARTHEID the Global Ecovillage Network ProQuest ProQuest 10 12 Retrieved 10 November 2021 About GEN The Global Ecovillage Network GEN bridges countries cultures and communities Global Ecovillage Network 13 April 2015 Retrieved 10 November 2021 Singh Bijay Keitsch Martina M Shrestha Mahesh 2019 Scaling up sustainability Concepts and practices of the ecovillage approach Sustainable Development 27 2 237 244 doi 10 1002 sd 1882 hdl 11250 2626781 ISSN 1099 1719 S2CID 159366736 Retrieved 10 November 2021 George Ramsey Passive Energy Applications for the Built Environment First World Energy Conference Association of Energy Engineers published in Energy Engineering Technology Proceedings of the First World Energy Engineering Congress October 31 November 2 1978 in Atlanta Ga Fairmont Press 1979 pp 220 242 For the term eco village itself see pp 229 and 239 http www villagehabitat com resources papers passive energy pdf Archived 2013 12 19 at the Wayback Machine Passive Energy Applications for the Built Environment p 230 a b Jackson Ross Summer 2004 The Ecovillage Movement Permaculture Magazine 40 Retrieved on 2011 08 11 a b Taggart Jonathan Nov Dec 2009 Inside an ecovillage bNet CBS Interactive Business Network Retrieved on 2011 08 11 The Significance of the Global Ecovillage Movement Archived from the original on 2013 05 12 Retrieved 2014 01 23 Ted Trainer on ecovillages Holmgren David The Essence of Permaculture Retrieved on 2013 07 31 Living Greener Ecovillage at Ithaca Retrieved 2023 03 26 Diana Leafe Christian Busting the myth that consensus with unanimity is good for communities http www resilience org stories 2013 03 20 busting the myth that consensus with unanimity is good for communities part ii Buck John Villines Sharon 2007 We the People Consenting to a Deeper Democracy First edition second printing with corrections ed Washington DC Sociocracy info Press pp 31 39 ISBN 978 0 9792827 0 6 pbk Kellogg W Keating W 2011 Cleveland s Ecovillage green and affordable housing through a network alliance Housing Policy Debate 21 1 pp 69 91Cunningham Paul A and Wearing Stephen L 2013 The Politics of Consensus An Exploration of the Cloughjordan Ecovillage Ireland electronic version Cosmopolitan Civil Societies 5 2 pp 1 28Further reading editBooksChristian D 2003 Creating a Life Together Practical Tools to Grow Ecovillages and Intentional Communities New Society Publishers ISBN 0 86571 471 1 Dawson Jonathan 2006 Ecovillages Angelica Buenaventura for Sustainability Green Books ISBN 1 903998 77 8 Hill R and Dunbar R 2002 Social Network Size in Humans Human Nature Vol 14 No 1 pp 53 72 Jackson H and Svensson K 2002 Ecovillage Living Restoring the Earth and Her People Green Books ISBN 1 903998 16 6 Walker Liz 2005 EcoVillage at Ithaca Pioneering a Sustainable Culture New Society Publishers ISBN 0 86571 524 6 Sunarti Euis eds 2009 Model of Ecovillage Development Development of Rural Areas in Order To Improve Quality of Life for Rural Residents Indonesia ISBN 978 979 19278 5 7 Joubert Kosha and Dregger Leila 2015 Ecovillage 1001 ways to heal the planet dead link Triarchy Press ISBN 978 1 90947 075 0 Christian Diana L ed The Ecovillage Movement Today Ecovillage Newsletter Gilman Robert ed Living Together Sustainable Community Development In Context Genovese Paolo Vincenzo 2019 Being Light on the Earth Eco Village Policy and Practice for a Sustainable World Libria Melfi Vol I ISDN 978 88 6764 187 1 Also in eBook Frederica Miller Ed 2018 Ecovillages Around the World 20 Regenerative Designs for Sustainable Communities Archived 2019 03 28 at the Wayback Machine Rochester Vermont Findhorn Press Litfin Karen T 2013 Ecovillages Lessons for Sustainable Community Polity ISBN 9780745679501External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ecovillages Global Ecovillage Network 1 eurotopia Living in Community European Directory of Communities and Ecovillages Fellowship for Intentional Community Ecovillage Directory Archived 2014 02 22 at the Wayback Machine Wanderer s End Tactical amp Practical Ecovillage Network of the Americas Vietnamese Eco Village in Saigon Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ecovillage amp oldid 1183023150, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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