We re-examine education and physics as tools for actual community organizing, building, and communal problem solving
The Institute's Rooms
Oct 9, 2015
Dialectical Communitarian Anarchism as the Negation of Domination: A Review of "The Impossible Community"
Aug 15, 2015
The Emergence of Eco-decentralism
Mumford Gutkind Bookchin:
The Emergence of Eco-decentralism
by
Janet Biehl http://www.biehlonbookchin.com/books/
http://www.biehlonbookchin.com |
In
the 1950s the aging Rose Bookchin still lived in the old apartment in East
Tremont, the Bronx neighborhood where she and her family had lived since 1920
and where her son Murray had grown up. Rose had been a diabetic for two decades
and was nearly blind. She was incapable of giving herself daily insulin
injections, so every day Murray took the Third Avenue El to East Tremont to
administer them.
He
would step onto the platform, and if he looked to the south, he could see over
the tops of the buildings the trees of Crotona Park. Then down the stairs and
onto the sidewalk, and he stroke briskly past his old street-side haunts: the
kosher butcher, the deli with pickles and whitefish and knishes, the old candy
store, the dairy with its slabs of butter — the old familiar shops were still
there. Most of the kids he’d known in YCL had moved away too, but their parents
still lived here — the buildings were rent controlled, after all, and it suited
them fine. The vacancy rate in East Tremont was less than one percent. Snatches
of Yiddish in the streets came to his ears, as in the old days, a comforting
sound as always. One difference: the farmers from New Jersey who’d brought
their produce over the bridge into the Bronx — they didn’t come here anymore.
Their farmlands were paved over. No one was farming there or in Yonkers now.
Jul 9, 2015
What is Zadruga Urbana?
“Zadruga Urbana” is a group of people who came
together with the shared dissatisfaction for the current system of food
production, who believe in the necessity for a collective movement to
take the process into their own hands. We believe that collective
gardens raise people’s awareness of producing their own food, consuming
locally and being autonomous/productive, enabling individuals without
land of their own to produce food with a sensitivity for their local
natural environment.
Our group wants to bring people together to learn and promote the
ideas to find solutions for change towards a more sustainable life
regardless of previous experience. Everyone is welcome to participate in
our gardens and network, to learn and share the skills of producing our
own food. We aim to use local seeds and to fertilize our crop
naturally.
Apr 19, 2015
Back in action with mycology in a permacultured community
If one can follow in detail some very careful steps in starting up mushroom growing especially on a farm and even more so on a farm with permaculture as part of its design, you can feed a whole bunch of people using what you may otherwise throw away. While growing mushrooms the left overs from the production become some of the best compost and soil producer on earth. It may be a science to know too much but you may regulate how much and what you need to know.
We encountered a great set of videos that are the best introduction to general mushroom knowledge based on a community/collective farm in New Hampshire called D-Acres dacres.org which is among the best community projects we have encountered in this English speaking universe. We hope you find the videos informative and get you started on something
https://youtu.be/y8sm1uDPWj8
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