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Worldchanging: A User's Guide for the 21st Century

Worldchanging: A User's Guide for the 21st Century
By Alex Steffen

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Product Description

Worldchanging is poised to be the Whole Earth Catalog for this millennium. Written by leading new thinkers who believe that the means for building a better future lie all around us, Worldchanging is packed with the information, resources, reviews, and ideas that give readers the tools they need to make a difference. Brought together by Alex Steffen, co-founder of the popular and award-winning web site Worldchanging.com, this team of top-notch writers includes Cameron Sinclair, founder of Architecture for Humanity, Geekcorps founder Ethan Zuckerman, sustainable food expert Anna Lappé, and many others. Renowned designer Stefan Sagmeister brings his extraordinary talents to Worldchanging, resulting in a book that will challenge readers to personally redefine the conversation about the future.

Each chapter offers readers new answers to key questions, such as:
Why does buying locally produced food make sense?
What steps can ! I take to influence my workplace toward sustainability?
How do I volunteer, advocate, and give more effectively?

From eco-building to responsible shopping, political action to humanitarian relief, Worldchanging puts the power to solve problems into the reader’s hands.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #89731 in Books
  • Published on: 2006-11-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 608 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. This 600-page companion to the eco-friendly website of the same name (www.worldchanging.com) is chock-a-block with information about what is going on right now to create an environmentally and economically sustainable future-and what stands in opposition. Along the way, editor Steffen and his team make the stakes perfectly clear: "Oil company experts debate whether we will effectively run out of oil in twenty years or fifty, but the essential point remains: if you're under thirty, you can expect to see a post-oil civilization in your lifetime." The organization of the hefty volume mimics that of the website, divided into sections on Stuff, Shelter, Cities, Community, Business, Politics and Planet. Typical readers will be introduced to new concepts such as harvesting rainwater, zero-energy houses, South-South science and the use of flowers to detect land mines in entries on everything from "Knowing What's Green" to "Demanding Human Rights." Each entry is brief but comprehensive; for example, the passage on "Better Food Everywhere" focuses on "Where it Matters Most," "Better Restaurants," "Community Gardens," and "Urban Farming." All entries wrap up with reviews of pertinent resources-including books, websites and moves-where readers can get more detailed information. With color photos on nearly every page, and written by a small army of contributors living and working around the world (with biographies almost as fascinating as their contributions), it's hard to imagine a more complete resource for those hoping to live in a future that is, as editor Steffen puts it, "bright, green, free and tough."
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review
"...buy this book." -- Treehugger.com

"...reads like a smart, hip mini-encyclopedia of what's new and what's next in green technologies and earth-conscious ideas." -- BusinessWeek.com, October 25, 2006

"Read it: it may change your life." -- Elizabeth Kolbert

"The seminal resource guide for anyone concerned about today and the future." -- Laurie David, Stopglobalwarming.com, October 20, 2006

"This book not only shows what is already possible, but also helps all of us imagine what might be." -- Al Gore

About the Author
Alex Steffen is co-founder and executive editor of Worldchanging.com, a global nonprofit media collaborative dedicated to exploring tools, models, and ideas for building a better future. He lives in Seattle.

Al Gore is the former Vice President of the United States, and author of An Inconvenient Truth.


Customer Reviews

This is a must-read, even if you're not ready to give up your gas-guzzling SUV5
If Gore's "An Inconvenient Truth" moved you, then Steffen's "Worldchanging: A User's Guide for the 21st Century" will move you to action. This is a beautifully crafted book that should be cherished - so full of resourceful ideas from around the world on how to live a more eco-friendly, sustainable life - without having to turn your back on the comforts of the 21st century. It's the ultimate feel-good book that lets you know there's hope for the planet if you're willing to make changes here and there in your daily life that really aren't all that inconvenient. Don't worry - the book doesn't lecture. It just INSPIRES.

Potentially a very useful book that's hard to recommend2
Updated June 18/07 to add one more star (up from 2 to 3) simply for listing so many ideas. Also added a little qualification to my list of further references at the end.

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The primary challenge, I think, of those who seek to change the world is to figure out a way of garnering a critical mass of like-minded individuals and then implementing the change on a large enough scale to make a difference.

It seems a bit of a watershed was reached this past summer, vis-a-vis environmental awareness, with the cinematic release of Al Gore's doc "An Inconvenient Truth (AIT)" and various reports on climate change out of the EU and the UN. The book Worldchanging fits in well as a follow-up to AIT for people who are only now realizing that biosphere-threatening problems exist in the world - ecological, social, economic and cultural. As a pre-emptive strike against the masses being overwhelmed and simply escaping into their Starbucks addiction (or perhaps as simply a shot in the arm), the folks at the Worldchanging blog site have compiled a large collection of specific ideas and initiatives garnered from around the world .

The idea is great and for the purposes of an introduction to a host of topics which could fall under the slippery rubric of "sustainable development" in a manner accessible to the general public, this book is probably a good choice. I haven't come across any other book which so captures the variety of topics in an intellectually accessible way. It's a bit like a (non-comprehensive and very brief) encyclopedia which could capture the imagination of teens and adults seeking exposure to local/global issues and cultures who haven't had the opportunity to gather information from sources other then mainstream press.

Unfortunately - and what earns it a 2 stars - while the book has very good breadth in the topics, the depth and quality of the content I found wanting. I give a couple of examples below.

First some more good things about the book.

1. It appears to be very well bound and finished.
2. it introduces the reader to a multitude of ideas. Lots of stuff. See their website for a general list of categories.
3. It includes a (slim) bibliography and references for further reading (which is definitely needed - the further reading, that is).

So, what are the problems.

1. The cover is pretentious and includes a listing of many (most?) contributors names in black down the spine. And here's another book on environmental issues with an unnecessary outer sleeve to waste yet more fibre.

2. I didn't recognize any of the contributors' names and I've been reading sustainable development books and journals for the last year and a half in grad school and attending various conferences on human sustainability for longer. This is not necessarily a bad thing but it does raise questions as to why at least a few prime movers, shakers, thought leaders and recognized experts aren't present. Maybe the editors thought there was already too much thinking going on and dammit, we're about action.

2. Issues here with veracity of the content. Some examples:

2.1. I'm a native Vancouverite (Canada). The included blurb about how wonderfully sustainable Vancouver is was contributed by the same person who edited Vancouver's 2010 Olympic Bid Book - the sales brochure for why Vancouver should be chosen by the IOC. Hardly a source for objectivity. The write-up is predictably rah-rah and, as is often the case, it blurs the line between the City of Vancouver (ca. 550,000) and Greater Vancouver (ca, 2,000,000) when it talks about the city's track record and its development. This colours my impressions of other contributions. At the 2006 UN-Habitat World Urban Forum (hosted by Vancouver), a European delegate I spoke with called it "The Vancouver Illusion."

2.2 Open ocean aquaculture is mentioned briefly and it doesn't mention the problem of parasites and disease that are and have been transmitted to wild stocks and in some cases wiped them out.

2.3 Seed-saving and seeds are mentioned without making reference to one of the most well-known activists/speakers/authors on the topic of seeds, biotechnology, corporatism, farms and water - Vandana Shiva. Nor does it mention the epidemic of farmer suicide.

2.4 Consumerism - The book opens with a couple of pages on our consumption habits and being smarter consumers and makes brief mention that perhaps a reduction in consumption is required (in the North) but it doesn't seem to suggest that perhaps we'll actually need to slash our consumption by a huge amount which is likely the case.

2.5 Didn't come across a critique of our capitalist system and whether or not infinite economic growth - which is our chosen path - is consistent with sustainable living for all species. Might be there, just didn't see it.


To close:

- a worthy objective,
- succeeds sort of as a family discussion starter,
- I have a lack of confidence in the content soundness and at times felt it misleads the reader as to the really salient issues.
- seems to have been written by a bunch of energetic folk anxious to DO something but extra effort seems to have been spent on packaging the content rather than the content itself.
- if you read this book, promise you'll do other reading to flesh out the real facts. This book is a quick blast through a multitude of complex issues.

I really had high hopes when I first saw this book on the web. It arrived last Friday, I returned it today.

Here is a short, very much non-comprehensive list of authors to read as well as some organizations to look-up on-line for in-depth information to keep you busy learning for weeks (not to suggest that I agree with all of their ideas. In fact, make sure you have your critical thinking and greenwash detection skills engaged with some of these references.)

Vandana Shiva, Marq de Villiers, Marc Reisner, Jeffrey Sachs, Stephen Lewis, Jared Diamond, David W Orr, John Todd, Greg Mortenson, E O Wilson, Paul Hawken, Herman Daly, Richard Louv, Thomas Homer-Dixon, Joseph Stiglitz, Tim Flannery, Fritjof Capra, George Monbiot, Sim Van der Ryn, Jane Jacobs, Worldwatch Institute, Earth Policy Institute, Earth Institute at Columbia, International Institute for Sustainable Development, World Business Council for Sustainable Development, CorpWatch, Corporate Europe, UN-Habitat and several thousand more.

This list won't cover off all of the topics initiated in WC; it's left as an exercise for the reader to discover more!

Restored my faith; while inspiring me to change, and to act5
Even starting to read Worldchanging has restored my faith that humanity can solve our current looming environmental, energy, and societal challenges. The introductory pages first stagger you with the size and severity of our global problems, and with just how unsustainable the current American way of life, consumption, and transportation are. But soon the pages start to reveal ideas and projects that are already starting to effect positive change -- some incredibly simple, others incredibly profound. I cannot read more than a couple pages at a time without just having to put the book down to either go "Wow" and comprehend what I've just read; or get up and do something . . . like write this review! For those concerned with our planet and future, reading this book, and acting upon what you read, is as important as, and equal to, voting. As this book shows, each changed person, even a changed habit, can add up towards making a huge and crucial difference in our environment and future -- towards a Changed World.