The Future is Local: Bioregioning 101
Reality Roundtable 14
January 19th, 2025
(Conversation recorded on December 11th, 2024)
Show Summary
The past century has been marked by the rise of globalization in every sense of the word - through production, culture, agriculture, consumption and more. This trend has brought great wealth and opportunities to many people - but what have we lost and forgotten through this process?
In this Reality Roundtable, Nate is joined by members of the bioregioning movement, Daniel Christian Wahl, Samantha Power, and Isabel Carlisle, to discuss the necessity of reconnecting to our local places for the sake of addressing our ecological, social, and economic challenges. In this fascinating exchange, Nate and his guests emphasize the need for decentralized governance and institutions, as well as communities organized around resilience and regeneration.
How deep are the historical and indigenous ties of humanity to the bioregional way of life? In what ways can individuals begin to engage with their local bioregions and contribute to a regenerative future? Finally, how can more humans who are connected and in relationship with the land influence future societies and cultures to be more aligned to the well-being of all life?
About Daniel Christian Wahl
Daniel Christian Wahl is one of the catalysts of the rising reGeneration and the author of ‘Designing Regenerative Cultures’ - so far translated into seven languages. He works as a consultant, educator and activist with NGOs, businesses, governments and global change agents. With degrees in biology and holistic science and a PhD in Design for Human and Planetary Health, his work has influenced the emerging fields of regenerative design and salutogenic design. Daniel is winner of the 2021 RSA Bicentenary Medal for applying design in service to society and was awarded a two year Volans-Fellowship in 2022.
About Samantha Power
Samantha Power is a Co-Founder and the Director of the BioFi Project and the Founder and Principal Consultant of Finance for Gaia. She is a Regenerative Economist, Futurist, and Bioregionalist based in Oakland, CA on the ancestral land of the Ohlone people. Samantha channeled her 15 years of experience learning and working in this space into a new book: 'Bioregional Financing Facilities: Reimagining Finance to Regenerate Our Planet’. The book makes the case for and explains how to build institutions to shift capital to place-based regenerators to achieve global climate and nature-related goals, while enabling the transition to regenerative economies. To turn this vision into a global movement, Samantha co-founded the BioFi Project — a collective of experts supporting bioregions around the world to design, build, and implement BFFs inspired by the templates laid out in the book.
About Isabel Carlisle
Isabel Carlisle is a communicator, educator and large-scale project organiser. Her experience in the London art world (where her work included writing as an art critic for The Times and curating exhibitions at the Royal Academy) led her to set up and direct the Festival of Muslim Cultures that took place across Britain throughout 2006. Over 120 events in almost every conceivable art form brought audiences into contact with the Muslim world in order to build bridges of understanding between cultures. Isabel moved to South Devon in 2010 and created and led learning programmes for children and young adults with Transition Network. Since 2012 she has trained in Regenerative Development and Design with Regenesis.
Show Notes & Links to Learn More
00:00 - Isabel Carlisle works + info; Samantha Power info; Daniel Christian Wahl works + info, TGS Episode
01:00 - The Bioregional Learning Center UK
01:23 - Designing Regenerative Cultures
01:29 - The BioFi Project + Finance for Gaia
01:40 - Bioregional Financing Facilities: Reimagining Finance to Regenerate Our Planet
03:51 - Donella Meadows + paper on the need for bioregional learning centers
04:36 - Bioregional Financing Facilities (BFFs) + bioregional finance and shifting worldviews
07:04 - Economic Superorganism
08:12 - Bioregion
09:05 - David Orr
10:41 - Human influences in shaping the Amazon rainforest + more info
10:46 - Lyla June + Architects of Abundance
18:05 - Tyson Yunkaporta
18:48 - Peter Berg
19:58 - Salmon Nation + Salmon Nation CoLabs
22:26 - Agriculture in pre-colonial Australia + more info
23:23 - Maladaptations and the evolutionary roots of the human predicament
24:58 - La Cotte de St Brelade excavation Jersey
25:33 - Slowing of the AMOC + tipping elements in the Earth System
27:25 - Commons + more info, commoning
28:08 - Elinor Ostrom + Governing the Commons
29:59 - Nora Bateson + warm data
30:22 - George Soros
34:27 - John Wesley Powell + states should be defined by watershed boundaries
37:13 - Global Biodiversity Framework Targets
37:25 - Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act
40:05 - Green Valley bioregion of West Sonoma County
40:08 - Atossa Soltani + Amazon Sacred Headwaters Alliance
42:42 - Subsidiarity + subsidiarity in the EU + bioregional economies and subsidiarity
43:32 - Participatory budgeting
43:32 - Commonland + project in southern Spain
45:14 - Permaculture
45:20 - Fritjof Capra, principles of life + TGS Episode
47:27 - Civilization Research Institute
48:33 - Peter Kropotkin + Mutual Aid, Patrick Geddes + more info
50:44 - Kincentric ecology
56:47 - From nation states to nature states article
1:01:51 - Buckminster Fuller
1:03:40 - Catalonia climate credit system
1:05:20 - German Länder
1:07:30 - Klamath River restoration
1:08:11 - Paper on finance for ecosystem restoration
1:09:40 - Fundamentals of watershed hydrology
1:09:52 - The world has lost *over one third of its forests
1:10:12 - World water conflicts over time
1:16:05 - 4 returns framework
1:19:21 - Gary Snyder + For the Children
1:21:24 - BioFi community of practice
1:22:42 - Bill Plotkin + TGS Episode
1:25:43 - Ceinture Aliment-Terre Liégeoise