I'm feeling slightly pleased with myself at the moment because after hearing about it for years, I finally made it to the end of John Harris's One Blood: 200 Years of Aboriginal Encounter withe Christianity - A Story of Hope. I'm only 35 years late - the book was published in 1990, although I first heard of it around 10 years ago. In my defence I would say that until recently it was out of print, and also that it's LONG at almost 900 pages. This year I finally stopped making excuses, bought a second hand copy and have read it from beginning to end. At the time of writing, Harris was the Director of the Zadok Institute for Christianity and Society, and evangelical organisation dedicated to encouraging Christians to explore the implications of their faith for social issues and forerunner of what is now Ethos . He was prompted to write it by the Bicentenary of Australia's colonisation and the fact that he was regularly asked to comment on Aboriginal issu...
I wrote some articles about degrowth ( here , here , here and here ). I always meant to write more but I also have another project called Climate/Housing and instead I wrote a series of articles there about extreme weather events . Then I got distracted by other things, like getting repairs done on my house. Now I'm back and here's what may or may not be the final post in my degrowth series. Back when I started writing about degrowth I observed that the idea makes perfect sense, but that its advocates don't seem able to outline a political pathway towards it. This is not to say that they are naive or disengaged - far from it. It is just such a fringe political idea at the moment that most people in politics and business (heavily intertwined in most societies including ours) simply ignore it. I don't want to be a hypocrite and write a pithy series of posts that are similarly impractical. I mean, at least Jason Hickel and Kohei ...