When we share as much stuff as possible, we walk more lightly on the earth and often improve our quality of life.
Local economies
When dollars are scarce, timebanks help neighbors swap skills, instead.
Wall Street is bankrupt. Instead of trying to save it, we can build a new economy that puts money and business in the service of people and the planet—not the other way around.
Local banks can change the world, one investment at a time.
It begins with small farms working with natural cycles and ends with fresh food and stronger communities.
Invisible Rights: We'll protect your right to vote. But not to eat. Economic human rights are in the Universal Declaration, but not in the U.S.
Many communities in the U.S. ship food out—and ship the same food back in. What's the value of keeping it at home?
Poor people are themselves creating the real job growth in much of the Global South through microcredit institutions and people's movements.
Appalachian Sustainable Development, ASD, sustainable forestry and wood products program, sustainable farms.
The ancient, wild rice-centered culture of Minnesota's Anishinaabeg people confronts cultivated "wild" rice.
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