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#timjackson — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #timjackson, aggregated by home.social.

  1. 📽️ vidéo en ✊ LA CROISSANCE VOUS REND MALHEUREUX...Mais comment s'en passer ? - Tim Jackson #croissance #bienetre #timjackson #informationlibre
    indymotion.fr/w/bcaa7a57-39dd-

    Vidéo Peertube, chaîne officielle Élucid.
    Prioriser le logiciel libre Peertube contre les GAFAM, milliardaires, youtube, quand c'est possible.

  2. 📽️ vidéo en ✊ LA CROISSANCE VOUS REND MALHEUREUX...Mais comment s'en passer ? - Tim Jackson #croissance #bienetre #timjackson #informationlibre
    indymotion.fr/w/bcaa7a57-39dd-

    Vidéo Peertube, chaîne officielle Élucid.
    Prioriser le logiciel libre Peertube contre les GAFAM, milliardaires, youtube, quand c'est possible.

  3. 📽️ vidéo en ✊ LA CROISSANCE VOUS REND MALHEUREUX...Mais comment s'en passer ? - Tim Jackson #croissance #bienetre #timjackson #informationlibre
    indymotion.fr/w/bcaa7a57-39dd-

    Vidéo Peertube, chaîne officielle Élucid.
    Prioriser le logiciel libre Peertube contre les GAFAM, milliardaires, youtube, quand c'est possible.

  4. 📽️ vidéo en ✊ LA CROISSANCE VOUS REND MALHEUREUX...Mais comment s'en passer ? - Tim Jackson #croissance #bienetre #timjackson #informationlibre
    indymotion.fr/w/bcaa7a57-39dd-

    Vidéo Peertube, chaîne officielle Élucid.
    Prioriser le logiciel libre Peertube contre les GAFAM, milliardaires, youtube, quand c'est possible.

  5. 📽️ vidéo en ✊ LA CROISSANCE VOUS REND MALHEUREUX...Mais comment s'en passer ? - Tim Jackson #croissance #bienetre #timjackson #informationlibre
    indymotion.fr/w/bcaa7a57-39dd-

    Vidéo Peertube, chaîne officielle Élucid.
    Prioriser le logiciel libre Peertube contre les GAFAM, milliardaires, youtube, quand c'est possible.

  6. 📽️ vidéo en ✊ LA CROISSANCE VOUS REND MALHEUREUX...Mais comment s'en passer ? - Tim Jackson: -- GFLOgETuDn4?version=3 #croissance #bienetre #timjackson #informationlibre

    LA CROISSANCE VOUS REND MALHEU...

  7. 📽️ vidéo en ✊ LA CROISSANCE VOUS REND MALHEUREUX...Mais comment s'en passer ? - Tim Jackson: -- GFLOgETuDn4?version=3 #croissance #bienetre #timjackson #informationlibre

    LA CROISSANCE VOUS REND MALHEU...

  8. 📽️ vidéo en ✊ LA CROISSANCE VOUS REND MALHEUREUX...Mais comment s'en passer ? - Tim Jackson: -- GFLOgETuDn4?version=3 #croissance #malheur #timjackson #informationlibre

    LA CROISSANCE VOUS REND MALHEU...

  9. 📽️ vidéo en ✊ LA CROISSANCE VOUS REND MALHEUREUX...Mais comment s'en passer ? - Tim Jackson: -- GFLOgETuDn4?version=3 #croissance #malheur #timjackson #informationlibre

    LA CROISSANCE VOUS REND MALHEU...

  10. CW: Care Economy "The Economy itself as Care" (the activities itself as care)...

    "The Economy itself as Care"
    "Health rather than wealth"

    "The dynamic we should be seeking is not growth, but care."

    "And that we need to shift from thinking of care as a sector of the economy, to care as the economy itself- it's activities itself as care"

    #Quotes from #KateRaworth and #TimJackson ➡️ @ProfTimJackson

    📼 Edited video clips by #FreeSchool

    #CaringEconomy + #Partnerism / #CareEconomy
    #Degrowth / PostGrowth #WellbeingEconomy + #DoughnutEconomics #Conviviality as our own #SystemChange #Care #Economy

    @JayatiGhosh
    @jks
    @xinjing
    @jasonhickel @Liegey
    @markhburton

    Edits with #care by #FreeSchool

  11. CW: Care Economy "The Economy itself as Care" (the activities itself as care)...

    "The Economy itself as Care"
    "Health rather than wealth"

    "The dynamic we should be seeking is not growth, but care."

    "And that we need to shift from thinking of care as a sector of the economy, to care as the economy itself- it's activities itself as care"

    #Quotes from #KateRaworth and #TimJackson ➡️ @ProfTimJackson

    📼 Edited video clips by #FreeSchool

    #CaringEconomy + #Partnerism / #CareEconomy
    #Degrowth / PostGrowth #WellbeingEconomy + #DoughnutEconomics #Conviviality as our own #SystemChange #Care #Economy

    @JayatiGhosh
    @jks
    @xinjing
    @jasonhickel @Liegey
    @markhburton

    Edits with #care by #FreeSchool

  12. "We can't afford poverty in a world in which there are environmental limits."

    #TimJackson, Professor at the University of Surrey, Director of the Centre for the Understanding of Sustainable Prosperity
    rnz.co.nz/national/programmes/

    #podcasts #RNZ #KimHill #deGrowth #sustainability #poverty

  13. "We can't afford poverty in a world in which there are environmental limits."

    #TimJackson, Professor at the University of Surrey, Director of the Centre for the Understanding of Sustainable Prosperity
    rnz.co.nz/national/programmes/

    #podcasts #RNZ #KimHill #deGrowth #sustainability #poverty

  14. "We can't afford poverty in a world in which there are environmental limits."

    #TimJackson, Professor at the University of Surrey, Director of the Centre for the Understanding of Sustainable Prosperity
    rnz.co.nz/national/programmes/

    #podcasts #RNZ #KimHill #deGrowth #sustainability #poverty

  15. "We can't afford poverty in a world in which there are environmental limits."

    #TimJackson, Professor at the University of Surrey, Director of the Centre for the Understanding of Sustainable Prosperity
    rnz.co.nz/national/programmes/

    #podcasts #RNZ #KimHill #deGrowth #sustainability #poverty

  16. Reversing the Freight Train: The Case for Degrowth

    ... Walt Rostow, who was, along with Kuznets, one of the field’s most influential early thinkers, understood growth as the foundation of the postwar world order. His Stages of Economic Growth, published in 1960, was unsubtly subtitled ‘A Non-Communist Manifesto’. According to what is now called the ‘Rostovian’ account, growth wasn’t just the solution to domestic instability in advanced industrial economies and the remedy for the backwardness of ‘traditional’ (non-industrial) societies; it was also the antidote to socialism. There was no need for revolution: the managed markets of postwar capitalism would eventually, peacefully, deliver the fruits of modernisation – a non-violent, self-reinforcing alternative to expropriation and collectivisation. It wasn’t clear, however, how traditional societies would respond to the inevitable disruption associated with integration into the global economy. ‘How,’ Rostow asked, ‘should the traditional society react to the intrusion of a more advanced power: with cohesion, promptness and vigour, like the Japanese; by making a virtue of fecklessness, like the oppressed Irish of the 18th century; by slowly and reluctantly altering the traditional society, like the Chinese?’ ...

    lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v44/n16/ge

    This reviews three recent books:

    • Tomorrow’s Economy: A Guide to Creating Healthy Green Growth
      by Per Espen Stoknes.
      MIT, 360 pp., £15.99, April, 978 0 262 54385 9

    • Less Is More: How Degrowth Will Save the World
      by Jason Hickel.
      Windmill, 318 pp., £10.99, February 2021, 978 1 78609 121 5

    • Post Growth: Life after Capitalism
      by Tim Jackson.
      Polity, 228 pp., £14.99, March 2021, 978 1 5095 4252 9

    • The Case for Degrowth
      by Giorgos Kallis, Susan Paulson, Giacomo D’Alisa and Federico Demaria.
      Polity, 140 pp., £9.99, September 2020, 978 1 5095 3563 7

    Archive / Paywall: archive.ph/2022.08.10-151410/h

    HN Discussion: news.ycombinator.com/item?id=3

    lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v44/n16/ge

    #Growth #Degrowth #LimitsToGrowth #SimonKuznets #WaltRostow #PerEspenStoknes #TimJackson #JasonHickel #GiorgosKallis #SusanPaulson #GiacomoDAlisa #FedericoDemaria #Books #BookReview #LRB #LondonReview

  17. Reversing the Freight Train: The Case for Degrowth

    ... Walt Rostow, who was, along with Kuznets, one of the field’s most influential early thinkers, understood growth as the foundation of the postwar world order. His Stages of Economic Growth, published in 1960, was unsubtly subtitled ‘A Non-Communist Manifesto’. According to what is now called the ‘Rostovian’ account, growth wasn’t just the solution to domestic instability in advanced industrial economies and the remedy for the backwardness of ‘traditional’ (non-industrial) societies; it was also the antidote to socialism. There was no need for revolution: the managed markets of postwar capitalism would eventually, peacefully, deliver the fruits of modernisation – a non-violent, self-reinforcing alternative to expropriation and collectivisation. It wasn’t clear, however, how traditional societies would respond to the inevitable disruption associated with integration into the global economy. ‘How,’ Rostow asked, ‘should the traditional society react to the intrusion of a more advanced power: with cohesion, promptness and vigour, like the Japanese; by making a virtue of fecklessness, like the oppressed Irish of the 18th century; by slowly and reluctantly altering the traditional society, like the Chinese?’ ...

    lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v44/n16/ge

    This reviews three recent books:

    • Tomorrow’s Economy: A Guide to Creating Healthy Green Growth
      by Per Espen Stoknes.
      MIT, 360 pp., £15.99, April, 978 0 262 54385 9

    • Less Is More: How Degrowth Will Save the World
      by Jason Hickel.
      Windmill, 318 pp., £10.99, February 2021, 978 1 78609 121 5

    • Post Growth: Life after Capitalism
      by Tim Jackson.
      Polity, 228 pp., £14.99, March 2021, 978 1 5095 4252 9

    • The Case for Degrowth
      by Giorgos Kallis, Susan Paulson, Giacomo D’Alisa and Federico Demaria.
      Polity, 140 pp., £9.99, September 2020, 978 1 5095 3563 7

    Archive / Paywall: archive.ph/2022.08.10-151410/h

    HN Discussion: news.ycombinator.com/item?id=3

    lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v44/n16/ge

    #Growth #Degrowth #LimitsToGrowth #SimonKuznets #WaltRostow #PerEspenStoknes #TimJackson #JasonHickel #GiorgosKallis #SusanPaulson #GiacomoDAlisa #FedericoDemaria #Books #BookReview #LRB #LondonReview

  18. Reversing the Freight Train: The Case for Degrowth

    ... Walt Rostow, who was, along with Kuznets, one of the field’s most influential early thinkers, understood growth as the foundation of the postwar world order. His Stages of Economic Growth, published in 1960, was unsubtly subtitled ‘A Non-Communist Manifesto’. According to what is now called the ‘Rostovian’ account, growth wasn’t just the solution to domestic instability in advanced industrial economies and the remedy for the backwardness of ‘traditional’ (non-industrial) societies; it was also the antidote to socialism. There was no need for revolution: the managed markets of postwar capitalism would eventually, peacefully, deliver the fruits of modernisation – a non-violent, self-reinforcing alternative to expropriation and collectivisation. It wasn’t clear, however, how traditional societies would respond to the inevitable disruption associated with integration into the global economy. ‘How,’ Rostow asked, ‘should the traditional society react to the intrusion of a more advanced power: with cohesion, promptness and vigour, like the Japanese; by making a virtue of fecklessness, like the oppressed Irish of the 18th century; by slowly and reluctantly altering the traditional society, like the Chinese?’ ...

    lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v44/n16/ge

    This reviews three recent books:

    • Tomorrow’s Economy: A Guide to Creating Healthy Green Growth
      by Per Espen Stoknes.
      MIT, 360 pp., £15.99, April, 978 0 262 54385 9

    • Less Is More: How Degrowth Will Save the World
      by Jason Hickel.
      Windmill, 318 pp., £10.99, February 2021, 978 1 78609 121 5

    • Post Growth: Life after Capitalism
      by Tim Jackson.
      Polity, 228 pp., £14.99, March 2021, 978 1 5095 4252 9

    • The Case for Degrowth
      by Giorgos Kallis, Susan Paulson, Giacomo D’Alisa and Federico Demaria.
      Polity, 140 pp., £9.99, September 2020, 978 1 5095 3563 7

    Archive / Paywall: archive.ph/2022.08.10-151410/h

    HN Discussion: news.ycombinator.com/item?id=3

    lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v44/n16/ge

    #Growth #Degrowth #LimitsToGrowth #SimonKuznets #WaltRostow #PerEspenStoknes #TimJackson #JasonHickel #GiorgosKallis #SusanPaulson #GiacomoDAlisa #FedericoDemaria #Books #BookReview #LRB #LondonReview