DOUGHNUT ECONOMICS by Kate Raworth

The traditional economic models of continued growth that we have been largely adhering to for the past century are very clearly no longer fit for purpose, in a world in which environmental calamity is becoming ever more a probability and where the vast imbalance between Haves and Have-Nots is abundantly clear. Doughnut Economics suggests a different model, one in which economic goals are measured alongside environmental ones, and where less measurable social necessities are given equal weight in the economic equation.

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WILDING by Isabella Tree

In 2001, Knepp estate in West Sussex embarked on a project of rewilding their land, drained by centuries of agricultural over-use. Almost 20 years on, the results of that project not only provide a fascinating story of nature’s resurgence, but also challenges our preconceptions about what nature is, and how we interact with it. Wilding is Knepp’s story so far.

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THE MOTH: 50 Extraordinary True Stories

The Moth is not originally a book. It is a live storytelling event that encourages people from all walks of life to stand up in front of a room full of strangers and tell them a story from their own life. The stories can be funny, sad, bizarre, mundane, challenging; it doesn’t matter. What matters is that the story is true and is about the person telling it. This book contains 50 of the best.

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THE KNOWLEDGE: A DIY Guide on How to Rebuild our World After an Apocalypse by Lewis Dartnell

The world has suffered from some form of apocalypse and most of humanity is gone. What skills and knowledge would the survivors need in order to recreate a modern civilisation again without regressing back to the Dark Ages? How would they find this knowledge, and where would they start? The Knowledge could very well be their new bible.

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