
Costa Rica modernized without wrecking the environment. Here’s how.

One reason for the programme’s success is its sharing of financial benefits, especially through its world-leading gender action plan. Another is cultural change. In building a new identity around “ la pura vida ” (the simple life), the government showed that, in combination with economic incentives, national pride can help bring long-established... See more
https://www.theguardian.com/profile/georgemonbiot • Costa Rica restored its ravaged land to health. The rich UK has no excuse for such complete failure | George Monbiot
Until the Arias government took power, Costa Rica suffered one of the world’s worst deforestation rates: on one scientific assessment, its forest cover fell to just 24.4% of the country. Today, forests occupy 57%, which, Umaña tells me, is close to the maximum: some parts were never forested, while others are now occupied by productive farms and... See more
Costa Rica restored its ravaged land to health. The rich UK has no excuse for such complete failure | George Monbiot
His department calculated the opportunity cost of forgoing a cow at $64 a year, so this was the money it offered for protecting or restoring a hectare of forest. He began by reaching out to small farmers and their representatives, in those regions where people were most sympathetic to the idea. The smallest landholders were offered grants, slightly... See more
Costa Rica restored its ravaged land to health. The rich UK has no excuse for such complete failure | George Monbiot
It doesn’t take more than a glance at the daily headlines to realize how far we are from this vision of a society that fosters fractal flourishing. Yet, just like the underground fungal network that nourishes trees in a forest, innumerable pioneering organizations around the world are already laying the groundwork for virtually all the components... See more
Jeremy Lent • What Does An Ecological Civilization Look Like?
An unpaved road runs alongside the beach past wooden homes propped up on stilts. Fishing skiffs in various states of repair sit along the water’s edge, a reminder of what was the principle way of feeding your family here for generations.
Many here are Garifuna, an Afro-indigenous population that is supposed to be protected by Honduran laws and... See more
Many here are Garifuna, an Afro-indigenous population that is supposed to be protected by Honduran laws and... See more