|
Worldchanging is an American non-profit online magazine and blog about sustainability and social innovation. The site has earned positive reviews (and won several awards and honors) and was rated the second largest sustainability site on the web by Nielsen Online in 2008[1]. Worldchanging is also the title of a book by the same editors, Worldchanging: A User's Guide for the 21st Century,,[2] a survey of best practices in sustainability and social innovation.
History and Organization
Worldchanging was launched in October, 2003 in San Francisco by Alex Steffen and Jamais Cascio, with a core of initial contributors, many of whom were part of the Viridian Design Movement and had intellectual ties to the Whole Earth Catalog[3]. In 2005, Worldchanging moved its offices to Seattle, Washington. In early 2006, Cascio split off to form the more explicitly futurist site Open the Future and Worldchanging became a 501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation. Worldchanging is now headquartered in Seattle and lead by Alex Steffen, the executive editor, with managing editor Julia Steinberger, contributing editors Jeremy Faludi and Sarah Rich, and associate editor Sarah Kuck. It relies extensively on an international network of writers and correspondents, see list below. Worldchanging is overseen by a board of directors, lead by Worldchanging's chairman, the environmental photographer Edward Burtynsky. Worldchanging is supported by a mixture of grants, book sales, speaker fees and reader donations. ContentWorldchanging practices "solutions-based journalism" [4], that is, the explicit goal of its work is to highlight the possible solutions to what the editorial team sees as the planet's most pressing problems, rather than to spread news of those problems or critiques of their causes[5]. Executive editor Alex Steffen was quoted in the Guardian [6] explaining the value of this approach by saying "Cynicism is often seen as a rebellious attitude in western popular culture, but in reality, our cynicism advances the desires of the powerful: cynicism is obedience." In its manifesto[5], Worldchanging declares its mission this way:
Worldchanging publishes a mix of essays and interviews; shorter original reviews, letters from the field (conference reports, lab visits, notes from correspondents' travels) and think-pieces; and blog posts "highlighting the best coverage of new ideas and innovations from around the Web." From time to time, the site posts radio-style podcasts as well. Worldchanging's content is divided in to seven sections: stuff, shelter, cities, community, business, politics, and planet. This taxonomy is designed to parse solutions based on their proximity to the reader, so that one one extreme Stuff is mostly about innovations in product design, food, clothing, and other objects used directly by individual people, while on the other extreme Planet encompasses global environmental and social issues, scientific advances and new thinking about the future of humanity. Worldchanging also maintains a network of local blogs in several U.S. cities and Canada. Bright Green ApproachCritical to Worldchanging's editorial stance is the concept of bright green environmentalism. Bright green environmentalism aims for a sustainably prosperous society that relies on new technology and improved design to live within the planet's ecological limits while increasing the potential for economic growth, human social development and individual quality of life. Like many other bright green environmentalists, the Worldchanging community expresses the belief that radical changes are needed in the economic and political operation of society in order to make it sustainable, but that better designs, new technologies and more widely distributed social innovations are the means to make those changes-- and that we can neither shop nor protest our way to sustainability[7]. They tend to focus extensively on the idea that through a combination of well-built compact communities, clean energy, green building, new technologies and sustainable living practices, quality of life can actually be improved even while ecological footprints shrink. "One-planet living" is a frequently heard buzz-phrase.[8][9] As Ross Robertson writes, "[B]right green environmentalism is less about the problems and limitations we need to overcome than the “tools, models, and ideas” that already exist for overcoming them. It forgoes the bleakness of protest and dissent for the energizing confidence of constructive solutions."[10]. The term "bright green" has been used with increased frequency due to the promulgation of its ideas though the Internet and recent coverage in the traditional media. For more on the differences between light green, dark green and bright green movements, see the bright green environmentalism entry. Critical Reception, Audience and ImpactWired columnist Bruce Sterling called Worldchanging "the most important website on the planet," and architect Richard Meier named it as his favorite site and praised it as "a wealth of information on sustainability"[11]. It has won or been nominated for the following awards and prizes:
According to BlogPulse, Worldchanging was the 135th most cited blog in the world in July 2008[12] In 2008, Nielsen rated it the second leading sustainability site in the world, after Treehugger.com, while Time Magazine named it one of the world's top 15 environmental websites.[13] In interviews, Worldchanging staff have described their readers as young, highly-educated and concentrated in green business, the design professions, NGOs, media organizations and academia.[14][15] More than a third of these readers live outside North America, particularly in the U.K., the Netherlands, Scandinavia, Australia and New Zealand. The site has a particularly strong following in Canada, and maintains a blog devoted especially to Canadian ideas and innovations[16]. Media
Worldchanging and its ideas have been covered in stories in the New York Times and New York Times Magazine, the Guardian, Time magazine, Der Spiegel, BusinessWeek, Fortune, Wired, US News and World Report, USA Today, the L.A. Times, the Wall Street Journal, the Times, Le Monde, the Independent, the Chicago Tribune, the San Francisco Chronicle, the Seattle Times and the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, Fast Company, SEED, ID, Dwell, ReadyMade, the Associated Press, the New York Review of Books, the International Herald Tribune, the Globe and Mail, the New Statesman, the Nation, New Scientist, Sierra magazine, Outside, Audubon, and the Sun. Worldchanging is the subject of a CNN documentary and editors have appeared on the Today Show, LinkTV and several CBC television programs. Radio includes the CBC's the Current, the BBC, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, NPR's Living on Earth, Open Source and Morning Edition programs, as well as on Earth & Sky, Marketplace and many local NPR affiliate and talk radio programs. Worldchanging (book)In November 2006, Worldchanging published a survey of global innovation, Worldchanging: A User's Guide for the 21st Century with a foreword by Al Gore, design by Stefan Sagmeister and an introduction by Bruce Sterling. It has received wide praise (see below), was a winner of the Green Prize for sustainable literature, and is now seeing translation into French (under the title Change Le Monde[17]), German and several other languages.[18] Harry N. Abrams, Inc., the publisher of the hardcover edition, listed it among their 50 best selling titles in July 2008.[19] The book was mentioned by BusinessWeek as one of the "Best Innovation and Design Books for 2006"[20] and received positive comments: Gore, in his foreword to the book, calls it "vitally important," adding,
Bill McKibben in the New York Review of Books characterized the book as "The Whole Earth Catalog retooled for the iPod generation."
Climate activist Laurie David called the book is "The seminal resource guide for anyone concerned about today and the future." while Earth Day founder Denis Hayes said, "'Worldchanging' might well be the most complete, compelling articulation of the possible look and feel and actual operation of a sustainable society ever written." Other reviews have been similarly positive: "(Worldchanging) is a comprehensive, cohesive vision for sustainability that feels perfectly in sync with the times. Out with the muumuus, Bucky domes and brown rice; in with the Hug Shirt, renovated factory lofts and New Rice for Africa. If Worldchanging is any indicator, the new green movement is globally aware, technically savvy, design conscious and, above all, optimistic." – Jenn Shreve, Wired "The enormous guidebook offers a Whole Earth Catalog-style compendium of ecofriendly objects, books, foundations, products, designers, movements and more. Shop less, shop right, and the story your things tell about you will be happy." – Penelope Green, The New York Times "Worldchanging is more than a road map of lifestyle choices; it is an innovative look at today’s environmental and social justice issues, offering 600 pages of practical, real-world solutions, including green building and “giving well.” If you’re looking for pragmatic ways to make the Earth a better place, Worldchanging does more than champion changing light bulbs and recycling—it challenges us to change the world." - Scott Edward Anderson, the Nature Conservancy Magazine The staff plans to eventually release the book as a free Creative Commons-licensed online resource. On October 2008, they announced their plans to launch a new book, as well as putting out a second edition of their first book.[21] Contributors and CorrespondentsWorldchanging is run by a core team of 5, and relies extensively on an international network of writers and correspondents:
Public SpeakingIn addition to its editorial work, Worldchanging frequently presents its ideas in speeches and other public appearances, especially by editor Alex Steffen and contributing editors Sarah Rich and Jeremy Faludi. From time to time, it takes on mission-related consulting work. Steffen does most of the organization's public appearances, and has spoken at TED[22], Poptech[23], Design Indaba [24], Amsterdam's PicNic and New Delhi's Doors of Perception as well as major industry events like the AIGA and IDSA national conferences, O'Reilly's Emerging Technologies (eTech), FOO Camp and South by Southwest Interactive (SxSW).[citation needed] He frequently speaks for academic and cultural audiences at institutions like Barcelona's CCCB, Stanford, Harvard, the University of Washington and the Art Center College of Design.[citation needed] He is represented by the Lavin Agency[25]. References
External links
|
This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.
Mercedes Car
This site monitored by SitePinger.net