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About This Issueby Alan AtKissonIntroducing Living Together (IC#29) Is "sustainable community" possible? Can we live together - with each other, and with the Earth - in ways that can continue to develop indefinitely, leading neither to ecological collapse nor social conflagration? The contributors to this issue believe the answer is a resounding "Yes!" - and they're proving it. Some are engaged in creating a new form of post-industrial, high-tech human settlement known as the "eco-village." Others, meanwhile, have been living in intimate harmony with nature - and each other - for millenia, and intend to continue doing so. In this issue, for example, we learn about:
We also learn about fundamentals: what community is, and how to create it in a group of diverse human beings. We hear from psychiatrist and author M. Scott Peck on the lessons he's learned in his five years of giving community- building workshops. And we sketch out a set of tools and guidelines for developing your own "eco-village" or sustainable community, right where you live. The ideal of a truly sustainable community is enormously appealing. It is also an enormous challenge, requiring not only the willingness to change the way we build our houses, use our land, and conduct our affairs, but the courage to change ourselves. We hope this issue inspires you to explore for yourself the ever-expanding limits of the possible. This issue is based in part on eco-village research conducted by Diane and Robert Gilman, with financial support from Gaia Trust of Denmark. Special thanks to all our eco-village correspondents! Please support this web site ... and thanks if you already are! All contents copyright (c)1991, 1996 by Context Institute Please send comments to webmaster Last Updated 29 June 2000. URL: http://www.context.org/ICLIB/IC29/About29.htm Home | Search | Index of Issues | Table of Contents |