{"id":2795,"date":"2021-01-14T11:57:07","date_gmt":"2021-01-14T16:57:07","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/lifeaftercarbon.net\/?page_id=2795"},"modified":"2024-11-13T15:36:45","modified_gmt":"2024-11-13T20:36:45","slug":"life-after-carbon-2","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/in4c.net\/","title":{"rendered":"Life After Carbon"},"content":{"rendered":"
[et_pb_section fb_built=”1″ _builder_version=”4.16″ custom_padding=”||0px|||” global_colors_info=”{}”][et_pb_row column_structure=”2_3,1_3″ use_custom_gutter=”on” gutter_width=”2″ padding_top_bottom_link_1=”true” padding_top_bottom_link_2=”true” padding_top_bottom_link_3=”true” padding_left_right_link_1=”true” padding_left_right_link_2=”true” padding_left_right_link_3=”true” module_class=” et_pb_row_fullwidth” _builder_version=”4.16″ width=”94%” width_tablet=”80%” width_phone=”” width_last_edited=”on|desktop” max_width=”94%” max_width_tablet=”80%” max_width_phone=”” max_width_last_edited=”on|desktop” module_alignment=”center” custom_padding=”0px|0px|0px|0px” global_colors_info=”{}”][et_pb_column type=”2_3″ _builder_version=”4.16″ custom_padding=”|||” global_colors_info=”{}” custom_padding__hover=”|||”][et_pb_code admin_label=”Book Listing” _builder_version=”4.16″ _module_preset=”default” global_colors_info=”{}”]\n\n\n
By the authors of Connecting to Change the World<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Our new book provides frameworks, insights, and advice about building networks to develop social innovations and takes them to scale. Tapping into the experiences of more than 20 successful networks, we tackle five key topics in depth:<\/span><\/p>\n Social innovation is demanding, uncertain, and prolonged work. Those of us who have chosen this work can benefit from knowing the lived experiences, practical knowledge, lessons learned, and stories of other practitioners and experts. Connect > Innovate > Scale Up\u00a0<\/em>fills a know-how gap in the social innovation field. It provides world-tested knowledge that can feed your confidence and hope and guide thought and action. Most important, it proclaims something we all want to hear: you are not alone and you can make a difference.<\/span><\/p>\n Click here to read Chapter One<\/a> \u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<\/span>\n Something new and important is afoot. Nonprofit and philanthropic organizations are under increasing pressure to do more and to do better to increase and improve productivity with fewer resources. Social entrepreneurs, community-minded leaders, nonprofit organizations, and philanthropists now recognize that to achieve greater impact they must adopt a network-centric approach to solving difficult problems. Building networks of like-minded organizations and people offers them a way to weave together and create strong alliances that get better leverage, performance, and results than any single organization is able to do.<\/p>\n Connecting to Change the World<\/em>\u00a0provides the frameworks, practical advice, case studies, and expert knowledge needed to build better performing networks. Readers will gain greater confidence and ability to anticipate challenges and opportunities.<\/p>\n<\/span>\n <\/a>24 cities. Hundreds of climate-change innovations. Urban transformation.<\/strong><\/p>\n New ideas are replacing the pillars of the modern-city model, converting climate disaster into urban opportunity, and shaping the next transformation of cities worldwide. “This is an important and inspiring book for business leaders and other professionals in their efforts to create more livable cities while strengthening climate resilience.” Our just released, self-published book, builds on INC reports with new chapters and updates about increasing climate resilience at the local level. Contents include:<\/p>\n We first published Welcome to the Edge of Chaos<\/em> just over 23 years ago, in February of 1997. We had spent over two years immersing ourselves in complex adaptive systems theory in the hope that Mother Nature\u2019s rules for evolution could teach us something useful about how to help organizations take advantage of turbulence to evolve and take themselves to the next level of innovation and impact. The insights of complexity theory turned out to be an excellent guide to the transformative re-design of human institutions like organizations and communities.<\/p>\n As we watched the world around us become more and unstable, we wondered \u2013 what does it take to leverage this instability into positive growth and evolution, rather than descending into chaos and destruction? So, we dug out our old copies of Welcome to the Edge of Chaos<\/em> to see if it still resonated for us. As it turned out, yes, more than ever. The principles of complex adaptive systems on the edge of chaos do provide useful guideposts to help navigate our current turbulence. As a result, we decided to update and republish Welcome to the Edge of Chaos<\/em> in the hopes that others will also find it a helpful guide.<\/p>\n<\/span>\n by\u00a0<\/span><\/strong>Peter Plastrik & Darryl Young.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n For American cities to thrive, they must have reliable supplies of water. Yet few urban leaders and sustainability planners have fully grasped and responded effectively to the looming threats that climate changes pose to this lifeline. As the planet\u2019s water cycle shifts and temperatures rise, our cities face the very real danger of having their drinking water supplies disrupted and stormwater systems overwhelmed, while swollen rivers and rising seas encroach on neighborhoods. The risk of waterborne diseases is also expected to surge, testing the4 limits of wastewater management.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n These climate-driven water disasters are already hindering some communities\u2019 efforts to achieve goals like affordable housing, public health, economic development, social and economic equity, and other aims. And in some communities, residents in areas hit by chronic flooding or long-term drought are opting to migrate out of harm\u2019s way.<\/p>\n \n [\/et_pb_text][et_pb_button button_url=”https:\/\/in4c.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/11\/Water-Resilience-Conflicts-10.21.pdf” url_new_window=”on” button_text=”Download Report” button_alignment=”center” _builder_version=”4.27.3″ _module_preset=”default” custom_margin=”||20px||false|false” hover_enabled=”0″ global_colors_info=”{}” button_text__hover_enabled=”on|desktop” button_text__hover=”Download Report” sticky_enabled=”0″][\/et_pb_button][et_pb_divider _builder_version=”4.16″ _module_preset=”default” global_colors_info=”{}”][\/et_pb_divider][et_pb_text _builder_version=”4.16″ _module_preset=”default” global_colors_info=”{}”]<\/p>\n —\u00a0from Boston’s Green Ribbon Commission, Embrace Boston and INC<\/span><\/p>\n [\/et_pb_text][et_pb_image src=”https:\/\/in4c.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/03\/Screen-Shot-2023-03-30-at-11.56.55-AM.png” title_text=”Our Shared History: Using Boston\u2019s Climate Opportunities to Address Systemic Racism” _builder_version=”4.16″ _module_preset=”default” global_colors_info=”{}”][\/et_pb_image][et_pb_text admin_label=”Text” _builder_version=”4.16″ text_font=”||||||||” text_font_size=”20px” ul_font=”|700|||||||” header_font=”||||||||” header_font_size=”32px” header_3_font=”|700|||||||” custom_margin=”||0px||false|false” global_colors_info=”{}”]<\/p>\n Our Shared History aims to lay the foundation for an open dialog among a wide variety of stakeholders in Boston\u2019s future who hope to explicitly and consciously use the shift to a resilient post-carbon economy as an opportunity to eradicate the harms of racism embedded in our built environment. Embrace Boston and the Boston Green Ribbon Commission undertook this work together deliberately to reach different audiences who may leverage a mutual appreciation of the historical account as the platform for a shared vision of progress.<\/u><\/u><\/span><\/p>\n This short report tells the history of Boston\u2019s development from a land use, transportation, and building perspective, and how the resulting inequities are now being dramatically exposed by climate change. It also suggests specific ways we can fulfill climate and anti-racist objectives through action, following a core set of principles that determine outcomes of climate equity.<\/span><\/p>\n \n \n [\/et_pb_text][et_pb_button button_url=”https:\/\/in4c.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/03\/BGR-Shared-History_%C6%92inal_IA.pdf” url_new_window=”on” button_text=”Download Report” button_alignment=”center” _builder_version=”4.16″ _module_preset=”default” custom_margin=”||20px||false|false” global_colors_info=”{}”][\/et_pb_button][et_pb_divider _builder_version=”4.16″ _module_preset=”default” global_colors_info=”{}”][\/et_pb_divider][et_pb_text admin_label=”Text” _builder_version=”4.16″ text_font=”||||||||” text_font_size=”20px” ul_font=”|700|||||||” header_font=”||||||||” header_font_size=”32px” header_3_font=”|700|||||||” custom_margin=”||0px||false|false” global_colors_info=”{}”]<\/p>\n THIS IS NOT A DRILL!<\/span>\u00a0<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n How Communities Are Using the Climate Emergency to Make Big New Moves to Decarbonize Locally<\/strong><\/p>\n <\/a><\/strong> \u00a0New report with Carbon <\/span>Neutral Cities Alliance<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n See summary slides<\/a><\/span><\/p>\n [\/et_pb_text][et_pb_divider _builder_version=”4.16″ custom_margin=”20px||5px||false|false” global_colors_info=”{}”][\/et_pb_divider][et_pb_text admin_label=”Text” _builder_version=”4.16″ text_font=”||||||||” text_font_size=”20px” ul_font=”|700|||||||” header_font=”||||||||” header_font_size=”32px” header_3_font=”|700|||||||” custom_margin=”||0px||false|false” global_colors_info=”{}”]<\/p>\n ONE WATER CHANGE LEADERSHIP FOR UTILITIES: SIX ESSENTIAL CAPACITIES<\/span><\/strong><\/a> (WITH THE US WATER ALLIANCE)<\/span><\/p>\n <\/span><\/p>\n [\/et_pb_text][et_pb_divider _builder_version=”4.16″ custom_margin=”||0px|||” global_colors_info=”{}”][\/et_pb_divider][et_pb_image src=”https:\/\/in4c.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/02\/Innovation-Network-for-Communities.png” alt=”Innovation Network for Communities” title_text=”Innovation Network for Communities” align=”center” admin_label=”INC Image” _builder_version=”4.16″ width=”80%” width_tablet=”” width_phone=”100%” width_last_edited=”on|desktop” global_colors_info=”{}”][\/et_pb_image][et_pb_text _builder_version=”4.16″ text_font=”||||||||” text_font_size=”16px” text_line_height=”1.6em” header_font=”||||||||” header_2_font=”||||||||” header_2_font_size=”28px” custom_margin=”||0px|||” global_colors_info=”{}”]<\/p>\n Since 2007 we have worked as the nonprofit Innovation Network for Communities (INC), producing hundreds of publicly available reports, analyses, and frameworks, as well as the path-breaking book,\u00a0Connecting to Change the World: Harnessing the Power of Networks for Social Impact,\u00a0<\/em>coauthored with Madeleine Taylor. We’ve reorganized the INC archives into a dozen topics<\/strong> and added a “Best of INC” and “Recent Materials” section, to make the INC products easily available here.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n [\/et_pb_text][et_pb_text _builder_version=”4.16″ background_layout=”dark” custom_margin=”-10px||25px|||” custom_padding=”0px|||||” global_colors_info=”{}”]<\/p>\n About<\/a> Recent Materials<\/a> Best of INC<\/a><\/p>\n Climate Change<\/a> Energy<\/a> Urban Sustainability<\/a><\/p>\n [\/et_pb_text][\/et_pb_column][\/et_pb_row][\/et_pb_section][et_pb_section fb_built=”1″ _builder_version=”4.16″ background_color=”#2d2d2d” custom_padding=”||20px|||” top_divider_arrangement=”above_content” transparent_background=”off” global_colors_info=”{}”][et_pb_row column_structure=”1_3,2_3″ custom_padding_last_edited=”on|desktop” padding_top_bottom_link_1=”true” padding_left_right_link_1=”true” module_class=” et_pb_row_fullwidth” _builder_version=”4.16″ background_size=”initial” background_position=”top_left” background_repeat=”repeat” width=”90%” width_tablet=”” width_phone=”” width_last_edited=”on|desktop” max_width=”100%” max_width_tablet=”100%” max_width_last_edited=”off|phone” module_alignment=”center” custom_padding=”0px||0px|||” custom_padding_tablet=”” custom_padding_phone=”” make_fullwidth=”on” global_colors_info=”{}”][et_pb_column type=”1_3″ _builder_version=”4.16″ custom_padding=”|||” custom_padding_tablet=”” custom_padding_phone=”” custom_padding_last_edited=”on|phone” custom_css_main_element=”margin: auto” global_colors_info=”{}” custom_padding__hover=”|||”][et_pb_code _builder_version=”4.16″ animation_style=”slide” animation_direction=”bottom” global_colors_info=”{}”]\n\n\n\n
Connecting to Change the World<\/h2>\n
Life After Carbon<\/h2>\n
\n\u2013\u00a0Mindy Lubber<\/strong>,\u00a0CEO, Ceres<\/p>\n<\/span>\n In Harm’s Way<\/h2>\n
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Welcome to the Edge of Chaos<\/h2>\n
New: \u201cWater Conflicts Arise for US Communities as Climate Changes Arrive\u201d\u00a0<\/span><\/strong><\/h1>\n
New: “Our Shared History: Using Boston’s Climate Opportunities to Address Systemic Racism”<\/strong><\/h2>\n
This is Not a Drill<\/a>
<\/strong><\/p>\n\n
Innovation Network for Communities<\/a><\/h1>\n