Worldchanging:
A User's Guide for
the 21st Century
This 600-page companion to the eco-friendly
website of the same name (www.worldchanging.com)
is chock-a-block with information about
what is going on right now to create an
environmentally and economically sustainable
future-and what stands in opposition. Along
the way, editor Steffen and his team make
the stakes perfectly clear: "Oil company
experts debate whether we will effectively
run out of oil in twenty years or fifty,
but the essential point remains: if you're
under thirty, you can expect to see a post-oil
civilization in your lifetime." The
organization of the hefty volume mimics
that of the website, divided into sections
on Stuff, Shelter, Cities, Community, Business,
Politics and Planet. Typical readers will
be introduced to new concepts such as harvesting
rainwater, zero-energy houses, South-South
science and the use of flowers to detect
land mines in entries on everything from
"Knowing What's Green" to "Demanding
Human Rights." Each entry is brief
but comprehensive; for example, the passage
on "Better Food Everywhere" focuses
on "Where it Matters Most," "Better
Restaurants," "Community Gardens,"
and "Urban Farming." All entries
wrap up with reviews of pertinent resources-including
books, websites and moves-where readers
can get more detailed information. With
color photos on nearly every page, and written
by a small army of contributors living and
working around the world (with biographies
almost as fascinating as their contributions),
it's hard to imagine a more complete resource
for those hoping to live in a future that
is, as editor Steffen puts it, "bright,
green, free and tough."
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